After pursuing him a week (half my
annual vacation from the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer), I caught
up with Danny Boles on a blustery day in early April at a high
school in eastern Alabama. I knew Id found him because his
fabled motor homehe called it Kit Carson, a sly allusion to
his jobwas parked on the asphalt above the schools
ram-shackle athletic complex.
I pulled in next to the RV, climbed out, and peered
through the drivers-side window. An empty fast-food sack and
an old ruled notebook lay on the front seat. I tried the door. It
was locked. From the ball field came the faint chatter of two or three
players and a coachs blistering shout, Come on, you guys,
talk it up!
Although not quite five in the afternoon, a twilight chill
had begun to creep over the tilled red clay beyond the collapsing
rail of the center-field fence. A red-shouldered hawk,
hungry or curious, sailed above the clay. I watched it as I
heel-walked down the slope looking for Boles.
In that puny weekday crowd, he stood out plainly
enough. There were aluminum bleachers on each baseline, but
Boles leaned on the fence midway between first base and the
right-field foul marker, a metal pole topped by a limp blue
pennant. He wore faded dungarees, scuffed loafers, and, as if it
were July, a short-sleeved Hawaiian shirt. A wispy-haired and
frail-seeming man, Boles rested his arms on the fence and
studied the talent on the field. Most folks would have
supposed him some players grandfather.
Aping nonchalance, I strolled past the first-base bleachers,
tiptoed around Boles, and took up a place beside him. I
hesitated to interrupt his scrutiny of the earnest kids scattered
across the field. I also hesitated to confess my real business, for
Boles had a reputation as a hater of newshounds.
When that dull half-inning had concluded and the teams began
lackadaisically changing places, I said, Mr Boles, youre
a hard man to track down.
He squinted at me as if Id jabbed him with a stick.
If not for your RV, I said, gesturing toward the parking
lot, I mightve kept going. This is the umpity-umpth town
Ive visited in the past five days.
Boless squint unclenched. His eyes grew a size or two, his
irises like tiny pinwheels. April sunlight turned his jug-handle
ears translucent. Although it looked as if I could knock him
over with a string bean, Boles intimidated me. Why? The
sleeves of his flamboyant shirt came down to his elbows, giving
him the look of a frail gnome with a bad haircut. Maybe it was
his rep that daunted me, or the hint of flint in his close-set
eyes.
Almost indifferently, Boles looked away. A between-innings
pitching change had taken his attention. A long-armed
black kid, with a fullbacks thighs, took the mound and hurled
incandescent heat during his warm-ups.
Sadly, with a batter at the plate, the kids performance
was high, wide, and ugly. He walked the first two batters to
face him, struck out a wild swinger, walked a third kid, struck
out a second hitter on a dozen pitches (including several that
would have been sure tickets to first if the batter hadnt
foul-tipped them), and came irreparably unglued when a blooper to
right center rolled to the fence for a bases-clearing double. He
shied his next pitch into the hitters ribs, then stalked around
the mound muttering and banging his glove against his thigh.
If he just had some control, I said.
The manager signaled for the right fielder and the
distraught black kid to swap positions.
Only then did Boles look at me again. Thats where he
shoulda been playing to start with. Hes a pitcher like the
Incredible Hulks a doily maker.
Although his look scalded, Boless voice unnerved me
most. Id forgotten that several years ago, during an operation
for throat cancer, hed had his vocal cords removed. Today he
spoke with the help of an amplifying device, a kind of cordless
microphone, held to his throat above the Adams apple. The
sound from the amplifier was intelligible enough, but mechanical
in tone. Listening to him, you got the feeling that his
rubbery face masked the shiny features and the artificial vocal
apparatus of a robot.
Who the hell are yvu, anyway?
Sorry, Mr Boles. I tried to recover. A sports writer.
Yeah? Who for?
The Columbus papers. Columbus, Georgia.
Boles nodded and pocketed the microphonelike gadget.
I telephoned your home in Atlanta a few weeks back, I
said. I want to do a major profile. A full-length book. Your
wife said shed relay the message. In the meantime, she advised
me to look for you at high school games up and down the
Chattahoochee Valley. She said we should have a face-to-face
about the feasibility of the project.
Sir, I added.
Boles put a finger to his lips. In a sudden sweep, he
moved it to mine. He wasnt here to jawbone; if I wanted his
cooperation, I had better knock off the kibitzing. The
scoreboard in left field said that this game was only four
innings along. How many innings did high school teams play?
Seven? Nine?
Despite a windbreaker and woolen slacks, I had Himalayan-size
goosebumps, while Boles, tanned and stringy in his
Hawaiian shirt, seemed primed for another four to six innings.
Surprisingly, he lasted only two more feeble ground-cuts,
then limped away from the fence toward the parking lot, gesturing
at me to follow. He didnt look back. Never mind his
hitch-along gait, he made good time. At his RV, he keyed open
the drivers door.
The game wasnt over, I said.
He turned around, his amplifier to his Adams apple. At this level,
its not games that matter. Its players. I dont have to wait for
meaningless overall outcomes to sort the stumblebums from the
racehorses. He said outcomes, even with his flat mechanical voice, as
if it were a disease. Sides, you were getting itchy to leave. Werent
you?
Yessir. It didnt embarrass me to say so. The April
twilight had rolled down on us like a corrugated iron door.
Boles said, Go around back. Ill open up for you. Well
have us a nip and chew the fat.
In less than a minute, hed admitted me to the boudoir-kitchen-sitting-room
of his motor home. We sat across from
each other in a cramped table booth that undoubtedly opened
out, at night, into a spine-deforming bed. From plastic cups,
we sipped Early Times Kentucky whiskey. Kit Carsons interior,
redolent of hamburger grease and lime-scented aftershave,
felt airtight and stuffy. Its warmth, and that of the
booze, made Boless filmy shirt seem almost practical. I shed
my windbreaker.
I let you find me, Boles said.
How so?
Usually, on the job, I park this rolling flophouse where the
competition aint likely to see it.
The competition?
Other scouts. They know my rep. They figure if Im tooling around
a certain neighborhood, Ive scented a prospect, maybe even another
MVP.
I wasnt above buttering him up. Youve signed over
forty big leaguers, havent you?
Forty-six. So I dont let the competition see Kit. I park
behind a gym, a dumpster. Sometimes I drive a renter.
You abandon Kit Carson?
Else guysll poach. Im only out here todaywaving his cup at
the parking lotcause I knew youd throw in the towel if you
didnt find me in a year or two. Right?
Whyd you want me to find you? Are you ready to talk?
Im ready to retire. Talking may be the way to fatten up the goose
thatll let us do it in comfort. He smiled. Or the only way to
clear my head.
Boles said he had a story to tell. He just didnt trust
himself to tell it like a professional writer would. So he proposed
that I ghostwrite it for half any advance monies, plus a
seventy-thirty split of all royalties, subsidiary sales, licensing
fees, and other incidental income. He had pored over too many
rookie contracts not to have acquired an acute business sense.
Cannily, he had also checked out my credentials, surveying
both my work for the Columbus papers and my profile of the
first female National League umpire in a months-old issue of
Sports Illustrated. His verdict? I was no Shakespeare, but I did
okay.
Mr Boles, thats nice to hear, but I hadnt planned to do
an as-told-to book. Im an interviewer and an analyst.
So interview. So analyze.
Sir, I want to write a book about a major-league scouts
life on the road, a book based on firsthand observation.
So the goofball who lets you observe him doesnt cut into your
profits?
Mr Boles
So he doesnt get a damned thing out of it but the pleasure of your
company?
I held my tongue. I didnt care much for Boless phrasing,
but his assessment of what I hoped fora book of my own,
profits of my ownhit the target dead center.
No offense, young fella, but your personality lacks the dazzle to make
that trade-off work for me.
Well, theres also glory.
Boles cut his eyes.
The book I have in mind has the working title The Good Scout.
Youre the good scout. Itll chronicle a full year of your life
on the road, scouting for the Atlanta Braves. Itll also
If you did that, traveled with me a year and wrote it all up,
youd deserve the money, all of it. But that aint the book I want
to do. Uh-uh. He sloshed himself another finger of Early Times and
twisted around to snap on a portable radio balanced on the ledge
above our booth. The static-riven broadcast of a ball game
gabbled away behind us as we talked. Effortlessly, though,
Boles followed the games progress, even as he outlined his own
literary plans and parried my bemused objections.
Other writers, he told me, had produced good stuffmagazine
articles, newspaper pieces, even entire booksabout
major-league scouts, limelight-shunning sandlot prophets who
had immeasurably enriched the game. The topic was tried and
true, even old hat. I argued that a bang-up writer and a well-chosen
scouts signature methods and idiosyncracies could reinvigorate
the topic. Boles shook his head. Yeah, sure, maybe I
could do an interesting book, a colorful book, about his career
(Id have to be a droning hack to render his story a total yawn),
but it wouldnt be a ground-breaking book, a book resembling
nothing else ever published about Americas national pastime.
Peeved, I said, Whatre you talking about, Mr. Boles?
Exactly what do you want me to help you write?
Ever hear of the CVL? Of Mr Jordan McKissic? Of the Highbridge
Hellbenders? Of Jumbo Clerval? Of a seventeen-year-old shortstop
named Danny Boles?
Danny Boles, yes. Everything else, no. In fact, everything
else in his catalogue had registered as gibberish. Only later was
I able to sort out the separate items and give each one a
distinct identity. Only later did I learn that CVL stood for
Chattahoochee Valley League and that the CVL had a mysterious
sub rosa cachet among older Southern sportswriters.
Thats right. Once I was a minor-league shortstop, a real comer in
Class C ball. The league I played in lasted six seasons, from 1938 to
1943, and its final season was the only year that young Danny Boles
played professionally. Thats what I want you to help me write about,
sport.
The high-school ball game had ended. The home team
had lost. You could hear the away boys monkey-hooting in
their dugout. A gaggle of fans filtered into the parking lot,
approaching their vehicles and closing in on Boless motor
home. In the greenish glow of the safety lamps that had just
fuzzed on, the home teams partisans looked ghoulish: drained
and unreal.
I groaned inwardly. Boles wanted me to write about his
brief and obscure professional career during World War II. It
sounded like a vanity set up. Here he was, arguably the most
successful major-league scout ever, but a nagging sense of the
illegitimacy of that career made him view his playing days as
more bookworthy than his near-mythic accomplishments as a
scout. Sad.
Noting my hesitation, Boles tugged one long earlobe. I got called up
at the end of the 43 season, but an injury, on the very day Mister Jay
Mac gave me the good word, kept me from reporting.
An injury?
The Phillies wanted me to take over for them at short, but a spiking
. . . Hey, you saw me limp up here from the ball field.
I had, but Boless limp, because he could still locomote
with gusto, had struck me as a minor handicap. Besides, no one
expected a man his age to be as svelt and rapid as a whippet. So
Id given no thought to his likely goals before signing on in
1948 as a scout with the Philadelphia Phillies.
The importance of that war-year season wasnt what happened to
me, Boles said, so much as it was the fate of my roomy,
Jumbo Clerval, and the demise of the whole blamed league.A story unlike any
youve ever heard.
Im sorry: I doubted it. I also doubted that the Phillies
(in 44, they were renamed, for two unhallowed seasons, the
Blue Jays, long before Toronto had a team on which to hang
that nickname) had called Boles up to play for them. After all,
not many players make it in a single jump from a Class C ball
club to a starting job with a team in the Show. Thus I dismissed
Boless claim as unverifiable and unseemly brag.
And he picked up on my skepticism. Wonder why I let you
find me, sport? I mean, a dozen other pretty good sportswriters
ve been after me, but I let you track me down. Any idea
why?
He had me stumped.
Cause you byline your stuff Gabe Stewart.
Thats my name, Mr Boles.
Danny. Its too tight in here to stand on formalities.
All right. Danny.
I chose you because of your name. When the Phillies called me up in
43, a fella named Gabby Stewart was playing short for em. His batting
average hung around .200. Not that great a glove man, either. In 44,
Freddy Fitzsimmons, the manager, moved him over to third. Stewart upped
his average nine or ten points, but the next year he was gone, whether drafted
or sent back down to the minors I couldnt say. He never got back to the bigs.
Gabby Stewart was my favorite Phillie, though. His weak stick and shaky
glove persuaded the front office to give a skinny, big-eared Oklahoma kid a
shot. You aint related to the guy, are you?
My first names Gabriel. Stewarts a pretty common surname.
Boles laughed, silently; he had taken the mike away from
his throat. The crows-feet around his eyes crinkled. His
shoulders jogged like the scapulae of a medical skeleton on strings.
Finally, he said, First, my book the way I want it done, then
yours the way you want it done. You get a split on mine, but yours is all
yours, from first pitch to final putout. Deal?
Deal, I said, surprised. How could I do better?
Boles and I shook hands. The ball game on the radio
dropped away like a whistling porpoise going under. Over
some more Early Times, we agreed on a series of tape-recording
sessions.
A few days later, fortified by the prospect of a lucrative
book contract, I sashayed into my managing editors office and
resigned from the Ledger-Enquirer.
Way I look at it, minor league ball back
then was sort of like B movies. Thrills on the cheap. Cheap
buses, cheap hotels, cheap stadiums, cheap seats, cheap equipment,
cheap talent.
Cheap-cheap.
Sound like an Easter chick, eh? Or like the mechanical
conductor on those subway trains out to Atlantas airport.
What do people call it, a robot voice? Yeah, a robot voice.
Sorry. Cant help it. At least with this gizmo up to my throat, I
have a voice. Couple of long stretches in my life, I couldnt talk.
Back then, Mama wouldve reckoned this sci-fi gizmo an honest-to-God
miracle. Awful as I sound, shedve paid money to
hear me talk with it.
Oh, yeah: B movies. What I meant was, they were second-line
stuff. Not Gone With the Wind, not For Whom the Bell Tolls,
none of that highbrow crap. Sometimes, though, they were fine.
Made on the cheap, but not tacky. Monster flicks. Nifty musicals.
Gangster shows. You got your moneys worth.
Same with an evening at the Highbridge ballpark, McKissic
Field, watching the Hellbenders take on the Mudcats or the
Boll Weevils. There was a war on. Half of what you wore and
three-quarters of what you ate was rationed. Not movies,
though, and not ball games. Folks flocked to both for about
the same reasonto forget the war, especially the bad or the
confusing news, and to have em a bang-up time. To get lost in
something besides a muddle of depressing newsprint.
In June of 43, I went into the CVL, the Chattahoochee
Valley League, right off my high school team in Tenkiller,
Oklahoma, near Tenkiller Lake, in Cherokee County. My
county was part of the old Injun Territory set aside by the
U. S. Congress for the Cherokees, that Beulahland in eastern
Oklahoma the bluecoats herded them to in the winter of 1838
and 39. The Trail of Tears. Anyway, Im one-eighth or
one-sixteenth or one-thirty-secondth Cherokee, some bollixed-up
fraction, a kind of Injun octoroon.
Me heading to Georgia from Tenkiller was slogging the
Trail of Tears backwards. In more ways than one. I was glad to
get out of Oklahoma, to know Id be pulling down real pay
playing on an honest-to-God pro baseball squad down in
Highbridge. It beat the stuffing out of pushing a mop in a
factory. Or walking into a Jap-infested bunker on the ridge of
some steamy coral atoll.
And it beat the fire out of unemployment.
For three years I played ball for the Tenkiller Red Stix,
the only team I even tried out for in high school. As a sophomore,
I played utility and pinch hit. As a junior, I started.
I idolized Phil Rizzuto, the Yankee shortstop. His first
two years with the Yanks were my junior and senior years at
Tenkiller High. My teammates called me Scooter because Yankee
fans called Rizzuto that. Actually, they called me Sc-scooter
because, if and when I talked, I st-st-stammered.
I could take that. Being called Sc-scooter, even if it made
fun of my handicap, at least showed me the other fellas
respected my talent. I hit like Scooter. I fielded like Scooter. I
could flat-out play.
What I hated was, some of my non-ballplaying school-mates
called me Dumbo. To keep from stammering, sometimes
Id just say nothing at all. Id stare at whoever tried to talk to
me. They figured me for a mute; in spitefuller words, a dummy.
Also, even before I made the ball team, everyone in Tenkiller
had been over to Muskogee or up to Tahlequah to see Dumbo, a
Disney flick about a pint-sized elephant with humongous ears.
Hilarious movie. A scream. And I was the perfect sap to stick a
tag like Dumbo on because I couldnt or wouldnt talk and had
me this really terrific set of ears. Ha ha. The older Ive gotten
the more Ive sorta grown into them, but as a pimply-faced kid
just barely over the puberty line, I looked like a drip.
Back then, kids called nerds drips. A drip equaled a nerd.
My schoolmates saw me as the uncrowned king of the drips.
The guys, even teammates, pulled gags on meput horned
toads in my locker or cracked raw eggs into my jockstrap. Girls
giggled behind their painted fingernails. The one time I nerved
up to ask a girl to a dancea semipretty gal, not the holy
homecoming queenI stammered like Sylvester the Cat and
turned fire-engine red.
Youre sweet, she told me, but Ive got this algebra test
to study for. And burst out laughing.
So I wanted out of that hick town. All my problems
would go fffftht!, like a blown-out match, the instant I left
Cherokee County. Id step into Arkansas or Texas and turn
into Clark Gable. (Or Alan Ladd, who was more my size.)
Talk about a naive fool.
My chance to get out of Tenkiller came from playing
shortstop for the Red Stix. All our teamstrack, wrestling,
basketballhad the nickname Red Stix. We were called after a
renegade band of IndiansCreeks, not Cherokees, but the
Creeks belonged to the Five Civilized Tribes toothatd
fought General Jacksons Tennessee militiamen at Horseshoe
Bend, Alabama. The batons our track team used in relays were
red, and our baseball team had red bats, even though it was
hard to keep them looking decent. The barrel of my bat, for
instance, was always flaking paint, letting the grain of the
timber show through. I got enough hits, only the handle of my bat
would stay ruby-red the entire season.
In the spring of 43, the Red Stix regularly beat up on the
squads of surrounding schools, even monster schools with a lot
more students. Once we took care of an uppity bunch from
Fort Smith, Arkansas. That April and May, scrapping every
Tuesday and Saturday afternoon, we went fifteen and three.
The folks in Tenkiller loved us. We were local heroes. Nearly
every working stiff in town took time off to come to our
games, even if they had to make up the lost hours later.
Tenkiller is a typical eastern Oklahoma burg: a grocery, a
barber shop, a beauticians, a pharmacy, a seed-and-feed depot,
a hardware store, a mechanic or nine. Back then, our chief
industry was Deck Glider, Inc. Deck Glider belonged to a
Tulsa-based firm called the H. C. Hawkins Company. Before
the war, Tenkillers Deck Glider plant made heavy-duty floor
waxers. My mamad gone to work on its assembly line in the
fall of 37. Her moonlighting outside the home irked Daddy
so bad, though, it goaded him to walk.
Anyway, after Daddy left, without so much as a fare-thee-well
or a forwarding address, Mama had to work to keep us
fed. By the time of Pearl Harbor, shed worked her way up to a
line managers position. Problem was, after FDR declared war
on the back-stabbing Nips, the WPBWar Production Boardtold
us floor waxers didnt contribute to the defense effort.
Neither did toasters, vacuum cleaners, coffee makers, vending
machines, toothpaste tubes, and lots of other products with
metal or plastic in em. So the WPB cut the supply of materials
our factory needed to make the Deck Glider. In fact, it was
illegal to make a floor waxer. You could even get fined for
hoarding old toothpaste tubes.
Mama nearlybout panicked. Howd she support us if
Deck Glider shut down? Tenkiller didnt offer much in the way
of jobs for women. It already had all the carhops, waitresses,
switchboard nellies, and secretaries it needed. Besides, any of
those jobs wouldve meant a step down in pay. Mama had
monthly house payments to meet. There were men, heads of
bigger households bigger than ours, even scareder than Mama.
Then a section chief from H. C. Hawkins headquarters
in Tulsa motored down to soothe everybodys fears. The parent
companyold Mr Hawkins had brainshad arranged some
war-production contracts with Uncle Sugar. Deck Glider, Inc.,
would close for a month to convert its equipment and its
assembly lines to the boring of gear housings for antitank guns.
No one would get laid off. It might even be necessary to add
on to the plant and hire some line workers from out of town.
Local builders would have to put up housing for these people.
Commutingeven with car pooling and special gas and tire
allotments for defense workerswas unpatriotic.
When Mama told me how the Hawkins Company had
saved her job, she cried. Its gonna be Boomer Sooner around
here again, Danny. The armed forces need a lot of antitank
guns.
But even after Deck Glider geared up for war work, a core
of old handsnative Tenkilleritesset up their hours, or
traded off with new workers on other shifts, so they could
attend Red Stix home games. The plant ran three shifts. It
never shut down. Mama worked days, six days a week. Even so,
our field had a bleachers section, behind the backstop, for
Deck Glider personnel. Despite her shift, Mama never missed a
home game or a single hour of paid labor. She traded off or
went in early. And Mama was no crazier for the Red Stix than
Mr Neal, the barber, or Tom Davenport, the owner of a
wildcat oil company, or anybody else in town. The Red Stix
glued that sagebrush community together. Deck Glider and our
local churches didnt even come close. . . .
Sunday mornings, New Yorks Mayor LaGuardia read
the funnies to his citys children over the radio. A station in
Muskogee picked up this feed and played it for us dumb Okies
and Arkies. I heard him once. I knew LaGuardias kisser from
Movietone newsreels. Id seen him conducting civil defense
exercises, supervising air-raid wardens and such. Hed wear a
white metal helmet, wave his arms, and carry on, reminding me
of Lou Costello, the short funny fella in the Abbott and Costello
comedy team. Over the radio, he sounded sort of sissyish.
How did a fella who looked and sounded like him get to be
mayor of New York? Tenkillers mayor, Gil Stone, wore
yoke-collared shirts, snakeskin boots, and dungarees.
Then I read in the Tulsa World that a crew of politicians
wanted to halt major-league ball for the duration. LaGuardia
got hot about that. He ripped into the jerks: Our people
dont mind being rationed on sugar and shoes, but these men
in Washington will have to leave our baseball alone! Hooray
for LaGuardia. A guy who stood up for baseball was defending
America better than some hot airbag in Congress, maybe even
better than a poor dogface on KP down in Alabama or Missisloppi.
Of course, baseball was my meat and drink. Mayor LaGuardia,
even if he looked like Lou Costello, at least read the
funnies to kids over the radio and gave the antibaseball nuts
what-for. I never stopped to think he had three major-league
clubs in his own city, that maybe greenbacks and greed had as
much to do with his defense of baseball as a love of the game.
Or maybe it was just LaGuardia hanging tight with the Yankees
pinstripe Mafia: DiMaggio, Crosetti, and Rizzuto. Who
knows?
Okay, okay. Howd I get from a sagebrush town like
Tenkiller to a peanut-growing burg like Highbridge? From the
Red Stix to the Hellbenders, a scrappy gang in the low minors?
After all, the war emptied the big leagues farm systems. The
Selective Service Acts, a.k.a. the draft, carried off so many
able-bodied young guys it nigh-on to wiped out the minors.
For a couple of reasons, though, I was a candidate for a
farm club, if the farm clubs survived.
First off, I played crackerjack ball. As Dizzy Dean used
to say, It aint bragging if you can back it up. I could. In the
twenty games the Red Stix played that springa couple were
exhibitionsI made only one official fielding error. Even that
boot you couldve argued. Our scorekeeper charged it to me on
a hard drive I knocked down and scooped to Toby Watersong
for a force at second. Toby had to reach a bit, and he dropped
the toss. The error couldve been mine, it couldve been his.
But Tobys uncle happened to be keeping score that day. So
what? No sweat, I figured. And still do.
You hear a lot about good-field/no-hit players: whizzes
at hoovering up grounders and turning double plays, but
zilches at the plate. I could hit. That spring I had thirty-six
bingers in seventy-five at bats, including a game against a
semipro oil-company squad that didnt count in our division standings.
A .480 average, seventy points higher than Ted Williams
hit when he became the first major leaguer since Rogers
Hornsby to pass .400.
I didnt lead the Red Stix in batting, though. Franklin
Gooch did. Goochie pitched, played center field, and ran like a
scorched jackrabbit. He outhit me by over thirty points. Day
after he graduated, he enlisted in the Marines. In June of 45,
he died on Okinawa on Kunishi Ridge, shot through the eye by
a Jap sniper. I still have the letter Goochie wrote me from the
field a month before the sniper got him.
Sorry to stray. But Goochies story ties in, sort of. The
second reason I was a candidate for the minors, gangbuster
stats aside, was I wouldnt turn eighteen until after the 43
season. My birthdays in November. Even though I was single
and a high-school grad, I wasnt yet draft bait. Even at eighteen,
Id probably end up classified 4-F: unfit to serve.
I had a speech problem. Sometimes, I refused to talk.
When I did t-t-talk, I st-stammered. Out would come broken
phrases, like bursts from a half-jammed machine gun, then
nothing. Sometimes the nothing, even when Coach Brandon
yelled at me (maybe especially then), stretched on and on. So I
sullened my way through school, eyes peeled and hackles up.
Almost every other way, physically, I was normal, but my
speech problem gave folks the creeps. If the Army docs didnt
find some physical reason for ita cleft palate was out, and my
bruised vocal cords shouldve healed long agoMama figured
theyd cull me as a borderline nut case. A GI had to have a
voice, if only to yell Lookit! when an infiltrator chunks a
grenade into a buddys foxhole.
A third thing put me on the road to Highbridge. A
couple that came to all our Red Stix home games was Colonel
and Mrs Clyde Elshtain. The coloneld retired as an Army
supply officer to become a big-shot procurement specialist at
Deck Glider, Inc. Mama suspected he mayve tugged a few
strings to help the Tenkiller factory get its conversion contract.
The real baseball fan of the two, though, was the missus,
Tulipa Elshtain. Swear to God, that was her name: Tulipa. At
fifty-something, Miss Tulipa still walked and drawled like a
Gone With the Wind belle. Even in Oklahoma, she remained a
member of the Confederate magic circle. At Red Stix games,
though, shed shed her ladylike ways and whoop and boo like a
sailor at a prize fight.
Come on, Goochie, give us a four-ply wallop! Drop it into
the Mississip!
Miss Tulipa and the colonel took to sitting at the top of
the Glide Decker bleachers, next to Mama. At the games, they
tried to make Mamathe poor, hard-working, abandoned
Mrs Bolesfeel like their pal and rooting partner.
Im their pity project, Mama said after theyd started
this. A swell game-day friend, but nobody to invite home.
Colonel Elshtain was management, Mama was labor.
Miss Tulipa would climb up into the bleachers wearing lace
blouses, peg-topped skirts, and either a velvet beret or a
fancy-dan straw hat with peacock feathers. Mama wore coveralls and
head scarves.
Attaway, Scooter! Miss Tulipa would yell. Attaway to
rap it, punkin!
Eventually, the Elshtains did ask us to their home, a two-story
antebellum job with columns. Itd once been the home of
a rich, uprooted Cherokee named Trenton Cass. The Cass
Mansion, everybody calls it yet. Mama sported heels, bottled
stockings, and her prettiest clingy polka-dot dress. I wore
khaki pants, store-bought galluses, and my Sunday tie.
At that special after-church dinnerI can still see itwe
had iced-down shrimp for appetizers, bleached asparagus, a
rice-and-chicken dish Miss Tulipa called Country Captain,
and, for dessert, orange sherbet and blueberries. I dont know
where the Elshtains got the fixings or how many ration points
it set em back, but a classier meal Id never had. I wolfed it all,
even the asparagus, a la-di-la vegetable I never liked and havent
eaten since. (Babe Ruth said asparagus made his urine stink.)
They even had wine, but nobody offered me any.
You can flat-out play, Miss Tulipa told me over dessert.
Howd you like to help a pro team win a championship?
Her voice was like Coca-Cola: sweet and fizzy, with a sting.
Mamad done most of the talking so far. I looked at her.
From the gramophone in the library, just off the dining room,
came the scratchy diddle-diddle-diddle of the colonels chamber
music. Like Miles Standish, I tried to speak for myself.
I wuh . . . I wuh . . .
Take your time, Daniel, Miss Tulipa said.
I want to pl-play in the m-m-majors, I blurted.
Miss Tulipas smile sparkled like the cut-glass chandelier
over the table. Why, of course you do.
Hes a baby, Mama said. He needs a honest job of
work.
The coloneld already excused himself and wandered into
the library, but Miss Tulipa nodded. Oaks begin as acorns
and major leaguers as sandlot players. What you need, Daniel,
is seasoning.
I understood that. Saying I wanted to play in the bigs
didnt mean I expected to start there. So I gawped, a drip with
a speech problem. My tongue felt like a folded washrag. Mama
saw my panic, the Jell-O wobble of my bottom lip.
You think hes good enough to go pro?
Laurel, Laurel dear, hes a prospect. Denying him a chance
to develop his gifts would be cruel. Suppose DiMaggio had
become just another San Francisco fisherman?
Hedve been a good one, probably.
Of course, Laurel. But hedve labored virtually unseen.
The loss to our national heritage, ah, incalculable.
A lot of ifs and maybes, Mama said. Why fret it?
Miss Tulipa shut up for a bit, then said, Daniel should
sign with the Hellbenders in my old hometown. My brother
JordanTulipa said JUR-dunwill pay him seventy-five
dollars a month, twenty-five more than hed make as a private
in the Army. Jordanll also provide lodging and instruction.
This rotten old war has just decimated the majors. If he does
well, Daniel could be wearing big-league flannels sooner than
you think.
Colonel Elshtain, wearing a honest-to-God ascot, wandered
back in. Army pays gone up. Danield make sixty a
month, even as a private. And the benefits that accrue as
Please, Clyde. If youre trying to recruit him, remember
Daniels medical condition may preclude his induction.
He should have no trouble at all shooting a carbine.
You forget hishis handicap.
Send him to boot camp. To your own Camp Penticuff.
The DIs there might well divest him of it.
Miss Tulipa exploded. How many young men do you
want to ship out as cannon fodder? Do you want to be rid of
them all?
Weve more at stake today than a minor league pennant.
The colonels lipsd blanched like day-old fish bait.
Given your patriotic fervor, Miss Tulipa said, why
dont you have your commission reactivated?
The colonel lifted his chin. Perhaps I should. He returned
to his staticky gramophone, sliding a panel door into
place between the library and us. You could still hear his music
bumbling up and down the scale, though, like drowsy bees.
Laurel, what do you think? Miss Tulipa said, turning
on the Suthren belle charm. Would you allow Daniel to sign
with Jordan if Jordan agrees he has the talent?
Dannyd be a high-school graduate, Mama said. He
could do whatever he wants.
I struggled to ask the last question Id ever ask at the
Elshtains table. Which farm s-s-system?
Pardon me? Miss Tulipa said. Oh. The farm system.
The Hellbenders belong to Philadelphia. Does it matter?
Not much. So far as I knew, no other organization had
even scouted the Red Stix. Even so, the name Philadelphia hit
me like a concrete medicine ball. Philadelphia had two big-league
clubs, the Athletics in the American League and the
Phillies in the National. Both clubs reeked. The Athletics had
finished last three straight years and the Phillies five. The
Phillies had been the only major league club to lose over a hundred
games in 42. If any American city ranked as Loserville, it was
Philadelphia.
Oh, Miss Tulipa said. Which team there? The Phillies.
Your opportunities with the Phils are boundless.
Bingo. I had a better chance of ousting Gabby Stewart at
short than I did Rizzuto at that spot with the Yankees or Pee
Wee Reese in Brooklyn with the Dodgers. Even so, Idve almost
rather thrown myself into a Japanese POW camp than go
to Philadelphia.
Mama and I left the Cass Mansion, and I comforted
myself by remembering that in Highbridge, at least, I wouldnt
be playing for the Phillies, Id be playing for the Hellbenders, a
team supposedly on the rough-and-tumble rise.
Jordan McKissicMister JayMac to everyone
in Highbridge, as I learned latercame riding into Oklahoma
in a Pullman car behind an old steam engine. He
planned to watch two Red Stix games, one on a Saturday, one
the following Tuesday, and return to Georgia. April of 43, two
weeks before the Hellbenders kicked off their regular season.
Mister JayMac came by train because the Office of Defense
Transportation had nixed pleasure driving. You could legally
call a scouting trip business, but patriotic polslike the
scoundrels LaGuardiad lit into in the paperwouldnt admit
pro ball deserved that courtesy.
Forty-three was the year the ODT forbid major leaguers
to go South for spring training. Except for the Cardinals, who
practiced in St. Louis, ballplayers had to train east of the
Mississip and north of the Potomac and Ohio rivers. Wiseguys
called this the Landis-Eastman Line, after Baseball Commissioner
Landis and the fella heading up the ODT. Mister
JayMac was a mucky-muck on the Hothlepoya County draft
board, down in Highbridge. To do his part for national defense,
hed left his Cadillac and colored driver at home and
faced the blowing coal dust and the jostling hoi polloi on a
passenger train.
In Tenkiller, Mister JayMac stayed in the Cass Mansion.
I first laid eyes on him on Saturday, when he climbed into the
Deck Glider bleachers with Mama and his hosts. He stood out
in that crowd. He was pushing sixtya couple of years
younger than I am nowbut tall, fit, and dapper. He wore a
striped white dress shirt, old-fashioned pleated linen trousers,
and a pair of military-pink suspenders. His hair was iron gray,
cut close at temples and neck. A salt-and-peppery forelock fell
over his forehead like an owlets wing. Even from my shortstop
position, I could see this terrific blue glint in his eyes: a sharper
blue than Miss Tulipas, like sapphire dust bonded to a couple
of zinc-coated war pennies.
From the stands, Mister JayMac watched me. He watched
Toby Watersong, Franklin Gooch, every kid on both teams.
Whenever I had the chance, I watched him back. Mister
JayMac was the Great Stone Face, perched above the hubbub
like a Supreme Court judge, mysterious and cool. Studying.
I had a good game Saturday, thank God, a couple of
singles and an unassisted double play at short. Afterwards, I
sort of expected Mister JayMac to come down and speak,
maybe even to make me a job offer, but he and the Elshtains
vanished, off to the Cass Mansion, I guess, without so much as
a nod. In the stands, Mama said, Miss Tulipa and the colonel
had been as supportive of the team and as complimentary of
me as ever, but Mister JayMac had scarcely spoken two words.
Not my notion of a courtly Suthren gentleman, Mama
said. Eyes like a starved wolfs.
The Red Stix never practiced Sundays, and Mister
JayMac didnt attend church with Miss Tulipa and the colonel.
Monday, though, he watched us from the stands on the third-base line, taking
in our every wind sprint, pepper game, and half-assed batting-practice bunt.
I could feel him studying me, intense and chillylike. The
processletting him ganderreminded me of what a beauty-pageant
hopeful has to suffer.
During this workout, I muffed a cozy roller at short, then
overthrew Jessie Muldrow at first trying to outgun the runner.
Bad. Baaad. At the plate, I swung too hard, topping the ball
once and popping it up on my second at bat. Rotten. Not even
the Phillies wouldve wanted me. Time I got a third chance to
hit, Mister JayMacd vamoosed. I got on base, but with a cheap
swinging bunt I legged out from sheer embarrassment. But so
what? Mamad better check with Colonel Elshtain to see if
Deck Glider had an assembly-line job for me.
Tuesday afternoon, in a game against Checotah, I forgot
the crowd, the bench jockeys in the other dugout, the dogs
barking on Cookson Road, everything but the rope-sized
seams on every ball floating my way. Dont know why, but the
ball looked big as the moon to me. Hitting or fielding, I
couldnt miss it. For all the effect he had on me, Mister
JayMacup in our standscouldve been in the Belgian
Congo. I played great. Afterwards, the boys from Checotah got
on their bus as low and hollowed-out as dogwood stumps.
Mister JayMac didnt speak to me after this game, either.
Once wed put it away, I did start thinking about him again, my
ticket out of Tenkiller. When he still didnt show up, though, I
thought, Nuts to you, mister.
Shortly after supper that evening, Mister JayMac showed
up at our stucco house on Cody Street. Five-and-a-half rooms,
just big enough for a couch, a pair of beds, a beat-up table, a
w.c., and a cheap cathedral radio. It always seemed to smell of
hash and eggs.
Mister JayMac didnt reach six feet, but in a buttermilk
coat with awning-sized lapels and pockets, he filled our house
the way a film actor can sometimes glut a whole movie screen.
Mama got a chair from the kitchen and made him sit. Didnt
want him looming. Then, like two kids in a dentists waiting
room, she and I huddled together on the sofa.
Maam, Mister JayMac said, Id like your son to come
with me to Highbridge tomorrow. He didnt bother to look
at me. He aimed all his magnolia gallantry at Mama. My club,
the Hellbenders, has need of him.
So do the Red Stix. Plus, Dannys got school to finish.
Yessum, Mister JayMac said.
Hes been going twelve years, nearly, Mama said. Why
fall shy of a sheepskin by a piddlin two months?
Why, indeed? An enlightened attitude, Mister JayMac
said.
He needs his education.
What sculpture is to a block of marble, Mister
JayMac told Mama, education is to the soul. Addison.
Well, Addison spoke true.
Yes he did, Mister JayMac said. But theres education
and theres education. If Danny doesnt return to Highbridge
with me tomorrow, hell miss the chance to train with us and
the opening month of our season. He pulled a string-tied
packet from inside his coat. Heres a contract, Mrs Boles.
He untied the packet and handed an official-looking form with
a clip-on to Mama. Also a check for seventy-five dollars, his
first full months pay. He couldve dropped a garter snake
down my shirtthat kind of thrill went through me. But,
Mrs Boles, you must countersign my enabling form and let
Danny go back with me. He reached over and tapped the
check.
I was a slave who wanted to be sold. School was lectures
and yawns, girls smirking and wiseacres pulling stupid jokes.
Mama stared down at my clipped-on check. Coach
Brandon says some nigger ballplayers make twice this, maybe.
Thats probably true, Mister JayMac said. I daresay
those players draw better than Dannys likely to jes yet.
Well, he cant go now anyway, Mama said. Even when
he can, seventy-five wont do. Thats coffee-and-cake pay.
Danny may jes be starting, but no colored boy ought to make
more than him.
My mama, the John L. Lewis of ball agents. All she
needed was Lewiss eyebrows. Mister JayMac ripped up his
check, and I almost swallowed my tongue. Smithereened. My
whole career.
Mrs Boles, you drive a hard bargain. Mister JayMac
took the contract back. Ill up his pay twenty-five and send
yall a new contract. Forget this one. Mr Boles, finally looking
at me, well send you a train ticket. Ride down soons youve
got your diploma, hear?
I tried to answer. Yessir, I wanted to say, but it might as
wellve been the Lords Prayer in Gullah.
As promised, the revised contract came two weeks later.
Mama and I signed it for a notary, with Coach Brandon and
the Elshtains as witnesses. Two, three days later, Mr Ogrodnik
announced my good fortune to the student body in the gym.
Kids cheered, pretty girls and class-officer types among them.
If Id had the guts, Idve dynamited half the hypocrites
there, even though I did like hearing them cheer.
Franklin Gooch said I was a lucky bastard. When wed
won the war, guys like DiMaggio, Williams, and Greenberg
would come home and their stay-at-home subs would disappear
completely. A real talent, though, would survive.
You, Goochie said, are a real talent.
Goochie was already eighteen. Early in 42, his mamas
younger brother had been killed on the cruiser Houston in the
Battle of the Java Sea. Goochie wanted to take a few Jap scalps
in the Marines, but he didnt begrudge me my shot at a career
in pro ball. Envied me, but didnt call me a feather merchant.
He had other kettles of fish to fry. Too bad his goals led him
into the hands of a graves-registration crew on Okinawa.
Tenkiller was a side-track burg. So I
caught the train in Tahlequah. Mister JayMac had sent me a
ticket.
Colonel Elshtain had a C gas-rationing sticker on the
divided window of his automobile, supposedly because his job
at Deck Glider had such import to the national defense. Actually,
I think, he had buddies in the War Department, who
knew folks in the Office of Price Administration. Anyway, that
C sticker got Colonel Elshtain all the gas he wanted, and he
and Miss Tulipa drove Mama and me to the station in Tahlequah
in his 1939 Hudson Terraplane. (That car was a picture
of chrome and ivory. It even had a radio.) My only luggage was
a duffel full of clothes. The handle of my favorite baseball batCoach
Brandon had given it to mestuck out of my bag,
and my bag rode in the Hudsons trunk. In the back, next to
Mama, I felt partly like a rich swell and partly like a murderer
riding in style to the gallows.
On the station platform, Mama looked angry enough to
spit. In truth, shed just clamped her lips to keep from crying. I
was grateful she was managing so well. No seventeen-year-old
kid wants his mama blubbering all over him in public. And that
railway depot was crowded. Tahlequah looked like Tulsa.
Recruits in civvies heading for Camp Gruber or Fort Sill.
GIs going back to Chaffee, Benning, Polk, or Penticuff after
furloughs. Cardboard suitcases and duffels. Parents and girls
mingling with the sad-sack soldiers and recruits. All the guys
were riding passenger trains, not troop-train expresses, with
civilians like me in a near-invisible minority.
Some of the GIs wove back and forth through the redbrick
station building. In buddy-buddy groups. Sometimes
theyd stop near Mama and me to look me up and down. I was
only to scoff atsoldier material like marshmallows are
ammo. I could hardly believe Id have to share a car with these
rude and crude dogfaces. The ones with stripes on their sleeves
scared the Cherokee piss out of me.
You puny cur, Mama said, dont forget to write.
I only stood five-five, but Audie Murphy, who came
along later, wound up the wars most decorated soldier, and he
was no bruiser either. Me, I was in tiptop trim. If I could play
ball in the Chattahoochee heat, whyd so many of these
wiseguy doughboys seem to think I couldnt charge into Jap
artillery fire? Whyd Mama assume Id steam into vapor under
the Georgia sun and never even send her a postcard?
I cant watch you leave. Be good. Do good.
A pair of nuns came up, smiling. Only they werent nuns,
but pillow-breasted Red Cross gals in habits and wimples.
They had a hospital cart loaded with goodies, like stewardesses
on a Delta flight. They took me for a recruit. They wanted to
give me magazines, Tootsie Rolls, Lucky Strikes.
He dont want none, Mama said. Thank you.
The Red Cross nuns toddled off, but the soldiers nearby
didnt. When Mama kissed me on the lips, a good slobbery
one, they had a snicker riot. Mama left me with the Elshtains. I
hoped the colonel would put the fear of God into those dogfaces
by calling them down for crooked gig lines and ungentlemanly
public comportment, but he didnt. Soldiers on furlough
were privileged characters, prodigal sons in gaberdine. Rightly
so, maybe. Theyd sweated out fourteen weeks of basic, and a
lot of em, like Goochie, would come home as statistics, battle
fatalities, instead of people. Colonel Elshtain understood. Hed
served in the Great War, the War to End All Wars, and he
understood.
Then the colonel and Miss Tulipa left too, and I was
alone with all the trained heroes and smiling Red Cross nuns.
A redcap directed useverybody going my way, at leastto
our coaches, and porters with hand trucks stowed our duffels
in the proper baggage cars. Anyway, this rail ride from Oklahoma
to Georgia gave me a new look at humanity. Time I
jumped off that train, Idve sworn the defense of the United
States was in the hands of sadistic cretins. Jerks that shot up
colored training camps in New York State and Louisiana. Yahoos
that, a couple of months later, danced the hat dance on
zoot-suiters in L.A. As a civvie, I felt like soft-shelled predator
bait too. Forget that my draft status had everything to do with
being seventeen and nothing to do with being afraid. Did a
wish to cap off the last year of my childhood playing Class C
baseball make me a coward?
They packed us aboard that train like cattle. On a mirror in the John,
somebodyd taped an Off the Record cartoon of a GI in his
skivvies standing outside a Pullman lavatory with his shaving gear. He
fingers his stubbly jaw. Great Scott! he barks. I
mustve shaved the guy next to me! Every seat in every
coach was taken; every aisle was a logjam.
I got up once, and a sergeant took my place. So I
squeezed my way through the clicking coaches till I found the
only empty seat in the last five Pullmans. I sat next to a PFC
whose head looked like the bowling-ball jaw of the guy in the
cartoon. A hulk, with a mug like a skinned Pekingeses.
How you know that seats not saved? he asked me.
I wanted to say, Screw you, but the snarl in the PFCs
challenge had taken all my sand away. I hadnt exactly had a
quarryful to begin with.
The PFC said, Nice ears, yokel. Buy em by the yard?
I went Duh like the yokel hed pegged me and laid a
hand on my Adams apple to indicate my speech problem.
Tonsillitis? he said. Strep throat? You got some kinda
contagious damned communicative disease?
I have a st-st-stammer.
You do, huh? And astigmatism too if you couldnt see I
was holding this seat for Pumphrey.
P-P-Pum?
P-P-Pum yourself, he mocked. Whats your name? Id
like to meet your whole yokel cl-cl-clan.
He was probably from a real metropolis like Coffeyville
or Enid, but I was a yokel.
B-B-Boles, I said. D-D-Danny Boles.
Where from?
Tenkiller, Oklahoma. No stammer. Give me a medal.
Send me to radio-announcers school.
Well, Boles, ya goddamned Okie, move your skinny ass
fore I line it with teeth. The guy bumped me with his elbow.
His nose floated in front of me like an elevator button I didnt
dare mash. Hey, youre still in Pumphreys seat.
B-but where can I g-g-go?
He laughed. He couldnt believe me, a kid innocent as
bottled water. He put his thumb into the dent behind my chin,
to show he meant for me to hop up. I jerked away and stumbled
into the aislewhich jostled with foot traffic, landlubbers
trying to get their rail legs.
I went enginewards. GIs, recruits, MPs with gunbelts sat
jammed into their seats, not one tender female among them.
Every car smelled of dried sweat, scorched khaki, cigarette
smoke, caked boot polish.
I finally stopped on a platform between two coaches. An
accordion-pleated rubber hood was supposed to join the cars
(to keep passengers out of the wind and coal dust), but the
train people hadnt hooked it up. I rode the coupling. The
wind felt good. So did being alone. The countryside had gentle
hills, dogwoods and redbuds still showing color in amongst the
evergreens. It got prettier the farther from Cherokee County we
chugged. Had Congress designated the Injun Territories for
their flatness and lack of trees? Probably.
Id stood there a couple of minutes when a baby-faced GI
banged through from the forward car. He scowled and patted
his pockets. He shouted, Got a smoke, buddy?
N-no, I d-d-dont.
Screw you! he shouted. Did he think Id mugged a Red
Cross lady for her cigarettes, then squirreled away my booty
from regular Joes like him? I just stared at him. Maybe a 4-F
civilian had snaked his girl, or a recruit had short-sheeted his
bunk. Running into such meanness just then felt like having
grain alcohol poured into a cut. My stare got harder. I lifted
my fists to my ribs. The kid saw them shaking. He spit down
at the tracks, easy-like, and returned to the coach hed come
from. That shouldve boosted my morale. Id shown my steel
and a GI had backed off. Problem was, hed looked like a
Campbells Soup kid.
In all the wind and clatter, I began to cry. The platform
had me for good, then. I couldnt go back in with tears on my
face. The GIs wouldve ridden me all the way to Georgia.
Our train wasnt an express. It crawled through every
podunk crossing, rattled to a chain-reaction stop in every town
with as many as two letters to its name. Passengers lurched
back and forth between coaches, but I clung to the couplings
guard rail and ignored them.
It took an hour and a half to get to Fort Smith and
another thirty minutes to pass through Fort Chaffee, the post
southeast of it. Recruits off, GIs on. A trackside do-si-do.
Finally, we clacked off through Arkansas again.
Later, in the dining car, I sat with three other guys who
seemed to be loners too. A swabbie going to Pensacola and two
dogfaces. Wed all been strangers, but the other fellas struck up
a friendly debate about the credentials (Ol Diz wouldve said
differentials) of the Cards without Enos Country Slaughter and
the Dodgers without Pistol Pete Reiser, who ran full-tilt into
outfield walls and knocked himself out.
My kind of debate. Except my vocal cords had a clamp
on them. All I could do, like some kind of chimp, was point,
nod, grunt, and grin. The other guysthe friendliest
servicemen Id yet bumped intomustve figured me for a runaway
from the Oklahoma Institute for Hayseed Dummies. I paid my
check and stumbled back to the coupling platform.
And stayed there, where my kidneys began to feel like
hip-hugging cocktail shakers. In the fields whipping by, I could
make out pole beans, snap beans, alfalfa, cotton. The soil had
the richness of devils food cake. We drove deeper into the
unreconstructed South. The air thickened, smells got odder,
the unfamiliar crops sort of scared me.
A soldier came out onto my platform. I bent over my rail,
but he didnt go away. I could feel his stare seeping through the
back of my shirt and up my armslike kerosene through a pile
of rags. Finally, I faced him.
An older guy. Stripes on his sleeves, ribbons on his breast
pocket, heavy lips. His coloring reminded me of a slice of
Spam. A sergeant. A vet of some combat theater, probably. I
relaxed. Battle-tempered noncoms showed themselves hard-noses
in training camps, but teddy bears with kids and women
and well-meaning civilians.
Your name Boles? the sergeant shouted. This scared me,
but I nodded. Im First Sergeant Pumphrey. Private Overbeck
told me about you! Described you to a T! You from Tenkiller,
in Oklahoma?
Y-y-yessir! I yelled back. Shaking again, not just from
the rattling of the train.
Sergeant! he corrected me. Im not an officer! Im not
a gentleman! Im damned sure no egg-sucking sir!
N-n-nosir!
Pumphrey gestured at the train, the flashing rails, the
marching ranks of cotton. This is horseshit! Come on! He
yanked me into the sudden hush of the passenger car.
My ears gulped at the quiet. Pumphrey prodded me
down the length of the coach, and then the length of another
one, and so on until we reached a car with a lavatory. Pumphrey
pushed me inside. Did he have queerish tendencies?
Coach Brandon had warned us boys in fifth-period hygiene
about that sort of crap, but I still didnt get it. Half our male
seniors had thought hygiene was a dirty word.
We had that lavatory almost to ourselves. The only other
guy in there had his tailbone on the back edge of a toilet seat,
his toes over the seats front edge and his arms around his
knees to keep his shoes from slipping off and jolting him
awake. His open mouth hissed softly. Pumphrey ignored him
like he would a water stain and backed me up against a sink.
I know your dad, Boles, he said. Until two weeks ago
we served in the same goddamned support group at an Army
airfield in the Aleuts. Ever hear of Otter Point?
I shook my head.
Its on Umnak. Cold as a polar bears prick. Windier
than Chicago. Foggier than a dry-ice factory.
I couldnt figure what Pumphrey wanted me to do. He
seemed to blame meor my daddy, if the part about knowing
him wasnt a lie or a smokescreenfor the Aleutian weather.
His red lips flapped. Threads of spit webbed them.
Cold, cold, cold, he said. Oil up there turns to peanut
butter. You use blowtorches to thaw your bomber engines. If
spray gets on an airplanes windshield, its like trying to see
through a sheet of pebbled glass. One drop of high-octane fuel
on your skinif youre cluck enough to expose itwill lift a
blister the size of a walnut. Follow?
Y-y-yessir. I didnt, but what the hell?
I once saw your old mans eyelids freeze shut. In our
Quonset, I made him rack out on a cot with his face between
the struts and the canvas webbing. Held a hot cup of coffee
under his eyes. Kept saying, Dont touch yourself. Unless you
want to go around with a finger glued to your eyeball forever.
You hear me, kid?
I nodded. Hard.
Ats how well I knew your papa, Boles, Sergeant
Pumphrey said. You favor him. Grow into those ears, you could
almost pass for his natural get.
My daddy, as I recalled him, had been a solid, good-looking
man. Leaving aside my athletic ability, no oned ever
accused me of favoring him. Not in any physical way. I usually
got told I didnt resemble my father. And who feels lower than
the homely kid of good-looking parents?
Pumphrey let go of my arm and pushed away from me.
Just how muchre you like your old man, anyway?
That seemed a fair moment to beat it. Pumphrey was
wound up, pacing and question-posing. I made a break.
Bam! Pumphrey slid between me and the door and nearlybout
paddled me slaphappy with his lips.
Hold it! Dickie Boless the worst excuse for a soldierhell,
for a human beingIve ever served with. A goldbrick
and a back-stabber. Pray God, you take after your mama.
He ever m-m-mention m-me? I said.
I dunno. I guess. Said something once like he mayve
sired a son. Mayve. Like if he had, it wouldve made him a
fraternity brother of Gods. Otherwise, kid, he was too busy
rejigging duty rosters and miscounting ammo shipments to
expend the effort.
He st-still up there?
Oh yeah. Oh yeah. Pumphrey sort of giggled. Theres
ossifers on Umnak who think he should spend the rest of his
natural life at Otter Point. For the sake of everybody down
here in the free forty-eight. Pumphrey moved aside again, and
I stepped all over myself trying to get out of there.
Hold it! He grabbed me, breathing licorice or
schnapps, something sweet and foul, into my face. Not so fast,
kiddo! I felt strangled. Whatd the crazy bruiser plan to do?
How much money you got on you, Boles?
M-m-money?
Yeah, m-m-money. Cash money. Your goddamned dad
was all the time borrowing. Wouldnt pay it back, neither. How
much you got?
Id boarded the train with fifty bucks cash money, half of
my first paycheck. I still had whatever I hadnt spent.
Pumphrey spun me, shoved me against the wall, fumbled
my billfold out of my hip pocket. Holding me in place, he
counted out my money, crammed the bills into his own breast
pocket, and flipped the billfold into a lavatory sink.
Youre short. About fifty shy of what your old man owes
me, kiddo.
Im n-not my fathers k-k-keeper.
Maybe not. But Im still out half a sawbuck. Whatre
you gonna do about it?
Youre st-st-stealing. Youre a d-d-damned th-thief.
Settling a debt dont work out as theft, prick! Pumphrey
snatched me away from the wall, then slammed me back
into it. My lip split. I cried out. Hush, boy. Accounts still
dont tote. We gotta make em tote.
Pumphrey pushed me into the stall next to the sleeping
GIs, wedged a hankie into my mouth, and spun me around
again. When he yanked my pants down, and my shorts along
with them, I finally had a two-bit notion of what he had in
mind and lashed back at him with an elbow. He showed me the
blade of a pocketknife, told me hed take my liver by way of my
rectum if I gave him any more grief, and bent me over the open
commode. What he did then took about two minutes and hurt
like fire.
You still owe me, Pumphrey said, yanking my pants
back up. Nine more wouldnt break your daddy and me even.
Id started to cry.
Stop it, Boles. Mention this to a soul, and your ass is
mine forever.
He left me there. I fetched my billfold, washed my face
and hands, and stood at the mirror not recognizing myself.
The PFC on the toiletI could see his awkwardly sprawled
body in the mirrorhad slept through the whole assault,
snoring like an asthmatic sea lion.
Some folks find sleeping on a train
soothing, like lying under a tin roof with rain chattering down.
Not me. The clickety-click of grooved iron wheels sliding on
long metal tongues reminds me of an alarm clock ticking. I
keep waiting for the bell to go off. I kept waiting for my train
to derail.
I was near dead from humiliation, but if an alarm started
to clatter, Id spring up like a jack-in-the-box. (Id claimed my
berth after some soldiers got off at Camp Robinson and some
others switched trains in Little Rock.) I drowsed some, but
only after crying myself to sleep. Drowsing, I dreamt of my
daddy, Richard Oconostota Boles.
My daddys folks came to OklahomaU. S. Injun Territorywith
a remnant of the cholera-stricken Cherokees from whats now
Pickens County, Georgia. See, I had great-great-great-grandfolks,
full-blooded native Americans on Daddys
side, on the Trail of Tears. They wound up in a reservation
settlement on the site of the town known today as Checotah.
Mama Laurel was a Norwegian Helvig, a paleface
farmers daughter through and through, but she and Daddy
met at a Lutheran church picnic on Tenkiller Lake while he was
doing carpentry work for a Wells Fargo agent out of Muskogee.
Daddy was nineteen when I was born, seven years younger
than Mama. They had a hard go of it. Money stayed tight, and
my father had a hurtful weakness for honky-tonking and catting
around. Mama excused him because hed been so young
when they marriedseventeen, just my age when I left Oklahoma
on that trainand because she adored him, never mind
he had the brain of a sly ten-year-old and the loving heart of an
armadillo.
Daddy played pickup baseball whenever he could, paid
good money for bad illegal whiskey, and sparked all the bad
young gals in and around Muskogee. He built barns, smoke-houses,
and graineries for folk, and he learned auto mechanics
from a local Pierce Arrow dealer. He loved cars. Well, no, their
motorstheir grease and pistons and belts.
A year before the stock market bottomed out, Daddy
drove a trap from farm to farm selling Ful-O-Pep Mash, a
chicken feed with cod-liver meal. It was supposed to prime a
hen to lay eggs the size of baseballs. Mama said Daddy always
held up a real baseball for skeptics, as if the mere sight would
convince em. And the first time he drove his trap around
hawking Ful-O-Pep, he did okay. Second visit, though, all a
farmer had to do was hold one of his runty eggs next to
Daddys baseball and the jig was up. The farmerd say a sore-armed
pitcher might appreciate the egg, but he felt cheated.
Before long, Daddy quit drumming mash and locked into fixing
farm machinery.
Mama had no job then. I was her joba go-go mobile
with a PA-system mouth.
Anyway, the market crashed, the Depression struck, and
the Great Plains turned into dust sumps. Storms swept down
even on our easternmost prairies and the hills around Tenkiller.
Spooky roarers. The sun looked like a rusted garbage-can lid
behind a big tea-stained curtain. Pure grit flowed through every
chink in the shotgun hovel Daddy rented from Mr Neal on
Tenkillers outskirts, coating every window ledge, shelf, and
door lintel. It drifted into ridges under thresholds. Our gums
bled. We mined our noses for booger pearls. Jobs dried up even
faster than the land. Folks started to move.
On dust-free days, Dickie Boles played ball with me. He
taught me how to catch and throw. Id stand in front of the
rear wall of Tenkillers abandoned icehouse hurling a rubber
Spaldeen at it. (One of those hard pink hollow balls city kids
used for stickball.) That sucker would bounce back faster than
light. Id field it bare-handed, quick-shift my feet, and snap it
back at the bricks as hard as ever I could.
Daddy had me do that until Id damned near drained off
my last kilowatt of kid power. Time I was seven, I could play
the bounce-backs for half an hour, bad hops and all, without
booting a one or alley-ooping a single throw.
If you can handle that, Daddyd say, you can field em
all.
Daddy also taught me to hit. For that, hed march me
into the alley between the Cherokee Feed Store and Schlatts
Small Appliances: Sparrow Alley. The chinks in the upper half
of the feed-store wall sheltered hundreds of English sparrows,
house sparrows, wrens. A sparrow apartment house. Those
birdsd chirp and scold. If you didnt take care, theyd get you
with a whitewash bomblet or two.
In our alley games, the pitcher stood halfway along it.
The hitter faced him from its streetside mouth, a broom or a
mop handle for a bat. Daddyd start, pitching the Spaldeen
underhand. Before too long hed go to a modified wind-up and
a three-quarter delivery. I had to hit as many pitches on a
clothesline to dead center as I could. No pulling or pushing
the Spaldeen more than a foot or so to either side of my dad. If
it hit a wall before getting past him, it was an out. A ricochet
beyond him was a hit, though. So were uncaught blue darters
up the middle. Rollers counted as fouls, but pop-ups were
inning enders even if youd just come in. A home run had to fly
out the far end of Sparrow Alley in the air.
The Boles & Son Jes-for-Fun Oklahoma World See-ries.
So Daddy called our games. If a dust squall didnt blow up,
wed play until dark. Usually, Daddy beat me. If I won, Id
strut and preen. Id brag to Mama. Today I know most of the
games I took from Daddy were ones he let me have. Sometimes,
though, hed go on jake-leg binges and play me smashed.
Id beat him easy then, no charity to it.
Down a few runs, hed lose the ball on purpose or break
the broom handle over his knee and call me an upstart snot-nose.
I got where I avoided him drunk, even though he was a
pretty easy drunk, not a mean one, right up till I took a lead on
him and he began to grasp how poorly he was doing, motor
skills-wise. Strange to say, after Prohibitiond ended just about
everywhere but Oklahoma, Daddy swore off drink for a while.
Then, when I jumped him at alleyball, hed laugh and call me
Tenkillers Ty Cobb.
Dick Boles wasnt Jesus Christ, but recalling him as hed
been when I was small, I couldnt picture him like Sergeant
Pumphrey didas the sorriest man hed ever had the bad luck
to serve with. Until I was eleven or twelve, Dick Bolesd been a
sockdalager daddy, good as a boy could want.
Lots of people, with the ruin of their farmlands, loaded
up their pickups and set out for Californias San Joaquin Valley:
Okies. Will Rogers said they raised IQ levels in both states.
Maybe so. The Boleses didnt go. Daddy liked Oklahoma, and
Mama still had kin aboutin Muskogee and Tulsa, mostly.
Jobs posed a problem, though, and in 35 Daddy disappeared
for eight months. Mama knew he wasnt dead because he sent
her twenty bucks a month through a cousin in Tahlequah. I
attended school by then, and Mama clerked at Rexall.
Turned out, Daddyd upped with the Civilian Conservation
Corps. You had to be unmarried to join. Daddy fudged
and got in anyway. He spent most of his time planting
wind-breaks in Kansas, living in a camp between Coffeyville and
Independence. The CCC gave him all his shots, fed him, and
worked his tail off. Pay came to forty bucks a month, and, if
the dust storms held off, all the fresh air and sunshine he could
stand. Daddy snuck away in September, beelining it home. One
of his bosses had acted like General Black Jack Pershingplus,
Daddy hadnt been able to tinker with car engines as much as
he liked.
In 37 or 38, Deck Glider opened its plant in Tenkiller.
Probably Colonel Elshtains doing, using his connections. A
few months later, Mama said good-bye to Rexalls and went on
the line at Deck Glider. Her take-home pay doubled. About
this time, I guess, Daddy started breaking down into the no-account
jerk Pumphrey remembered from Otter Point. He
couldve had him a job at Deck Glider too, but the very idea of
hunching indoors over buffer-brush assemblies made him stir
crazy. He figured Mama herself would finally crack and begged
her to quit. She wouldnt. He smuggled booze in from Fort
Smith, or bought it off local leggers, and got stewed three or
four times a week. He and Mama battled. Lots of times, they
woke me up screeching like peacocks and shoving chairs
around. Mornings, scratches on the floor would shine like
yellow paint.
The summer World War Two started in Europe, Daddy
cut out again. So what? I asked myself. So what? He hadnt
taken me to Sparrow Alley for months. Id fire bounce-backs at
the old icehouse, though, over and overuntil my arms felt
like window-sash weights. An outlet, you know. Therapy, a
shrink todayd call it.
Mama and I expected Daddy back at any moment, the
way hed turned up, hungry puppy-like, after his unhappy stint
with the CCC, but as the days wore on and the news from
overseas got gloomier, we stopped expecting it. He didnt wire
us cash every month, the way he had before, and none of his
cousins in the area would admit to having a clue about his
whereabouts. Maybe they really didnt, but Mama had her
doubts.
In my Pullman berth, though, I dreamt about him.
My Red Stix team has to play a bunch of
soldiers on a windy airfield in the Aleutians. Us Tenkillerites
have on our regular flannel baseball togs, but the soldiers have
dressed for the cold: boots, jackets with hoods, gloves like
Army-drab oven mitts. An away game, see? The home team
sets the playing conditions. I hop around at short, flapping my
arms to keep warm. I hate playing soldiers because theyre
older and more experienced. And, up in the Aleuts, they get
last bat.
Bottom of an inning, pretty far along. Feels like weve
played a week. Otter Point two, Tenkiller zero. Except for the
screaming wind, my dreams silent. Guys open their mouths,
but nothing comes out. I cant tell if the winds drowning our
voices or floating overhead like piano notes at an old Buster
Keaton flick.
After a while, I seem to be alone. Ive got teammates, but
shrouds of fog have swallowed them. Theyre like ghosts in
fuzzy straitjackets, Im the only Red Stix player with a clear
outline or any freedom of movement, the only Red Stix player
acting fired up, but Im . . . well, Im scared.
When I move, my spikes strike firelike wading through
an ankle-high forest of Fourth of July sparklers. The airfield is
a big checkerboard of holey steel mats. The engineers on
Umnak have locked the mats together over the tundra as a
runway for patched-up Flying Fortresses and Liberators. In
newsreels, its called Marsden matting.
From that point on, every batted ball comes my way,
every chance. Grounders skip at me like lopsided rocks.
Pop-ups and liners are worse. Every time I dive or try to set myself,
I snag my spikes in the grid and fall. The mats edges slice me
up. My hands bleed, my knees look like tomato pulp.
C-c-come on, you g-guys! I yell. Ya g-g-gotta h-help me!
The wind blows my words to Siberia. I only hear them because I yelled
them into the godawful williwaw.
Hours later, I get the innings last out and hobble in for
my own at bats. The other Red Stix have vanished. Ive got to
bring us back from what looks like sure defeatthe Umnak
bunch mustve scored a dozen times in their at batbut the
colds begun to gnaw into me. My fingers feel carrot-stick
brittle. Two or three snap off when I pick up my bat.
I try to dig in against the Otter Point pitcher anyway. He
jams me with an inside curve. The ball rotates in like a chunk
of packed ice. When I foul it, mostly to protect myself, my
thumb shatters. Now Im holding the bat with one finger and
the heel of my hand. How can I drive the ball even if I make
contact? The outlook isnt brilliant. I seem to fall apart the
piecemeal way icebergs do. D-D-Daddy! I yell.
The Otter Point pitcher vanishes. So do the guys in
Army-green parkas and gutta-percha boots behind him. Just
like the Red Stix, gone. I stand at the plate, a perforated steel
grid at the end of a steel runway. The runway looks like an
ocean, an ocean of Marsden matting. It laps at the foothills of
a squat rampart of mountains.
An airplane appears in a notch of the mountains. Its
wings rock in the fog as it drops toward the field. A P-40
Warhawk, like the planes flown by Chenault and the Flying
Tigers, tiger jaws painted on its snout. It comes straight at me.
Behind the P-40, lightning splits the sky. Zigzagging
fiery snakes of lightning. A thunderclap bounces the runways
long steel gridwork, the first thing besides the wind Ive really
heard. More thunderclaps. They back up on one another and
blend into one flat murmuring BOOOOM! The landing strip
buckles in waves. If the P-40 doesnt plow me under, the mats
will hurl me down and stamp me like a waffle. But I freeze
where I stand. The Warhawks pilot doesnt drop his landing
gear or try to land. He blitzes toward me a few feet above the
steel plates, ahead of the crest of their buckle. If he wont pull
up, his propellers will dice me for sure.
Then I see the pilot in the cockpit. His face belongs to
my father, Richard Oconostota Boles, but its a twisted version
of the face I remember. His eyes bulge. His lips sneer. His nose
lies flat, like a second-rate pugs. Just before he yanks back on
his joystick and goes roaring away toward the sea, he gives me a
wink; a wink, for Christs sake.
Then the last running wave of the Marsden grid drops
toward me, clattering. I cross my arms over my head in a stupid
attempt to keep the panels from crushing me. The background
keen of the wind seems a fit sort of white noise to whats
happening to me. I still cant tell if its keening scours my
mouth or comes from it, but so what? It suits our loss. Also,
my daddy winked.
I jerked awake. The clicking of the rails echoed in my chest: clickety-clack, dickety-clack. Life meant more than baseball. The look on Daddys face rushing toward me in that P-40 was a look hed really given me once, right down to the wink. Sitting there, I dredged up that old memory, the whole lousy business.
When I was thirteen, early one A.M., Richard
Oconostota Boles and the former Laurel Helvig shouted
and scraped chairs around. Again. Id have to remap the living
room in my head to get to the John without stubbing a toe.
The shouting never let up. The shouts smeared into an angry
howl. Sofa legs scraped, chair legs tap-danced.
Usually when my folks argued, at some point the noise
level dropped off. A breather. Not this time. The din got so
loud I wondered if theyd called in a few pals to help them
argue. Then, atop the raised voices, I heard a storm of flaps
and soft collisionsthe noise youd probably get if you set up
a huge fan at one end of Sparrow Alley. Had Daddy released a
bunch of bats in the front room?
Tear up another one, Dickie, and Ill kill you!
Try it! Jes try it!
My legd gone to sleep, but I limped into the front room
to see the row firsthand. I hoped just seeing me would shame
my parents into making up.
But I walked into a holy mess. Daddyd been playing Jack
the Ripper with Mamas Life magazines. Black-and-white
photos of Hitler, Shirley Temple, Lou Gehrig, and so on
shingled the floor. Bedsheet pages. Daddyd torn them out and
thrown them all over. One teetered on a lampshade. Marian
Anderson at the Lincoln Memorial dangled from between a
pair of Venetian-blind slats. I took in every detail because the
room looked like a hand grenaded deranged it.
See there, Mama said. Youve done woke up Danny.
Get out of here! Daddy yelled. Go back to bed!
I stood there, in my too-short pajama bottoms, and
Daddy hurled a rolled-up magazine at me. It opened out and
slid to rest at my feet. All the coverless copies of Life lay strewn
about like stepping-stones to a loony bin.
Yell at me if you like! Mama said. Go ahead! But leave
your son be!
Mine, is he? Look at him. He dont favor me. He dont
favor me a bit.
Whats that supposed to mean?
Danny dont look, or do, like I do. Moren likely, some
two-bit smoothie planted the boy while I was over to Tahlequah
trying to make some dough.
Filth! An adultd be ashamed to say it.
I am ashamed. My son aint my son. My wife let somebody
else spike her. Daddys high pink color told his drunkenness.
Mama cried, Lousy redskin scum! and started for him.
A Life squirted out from under her. She toppled before she
could begin flailing away. Daddy caught her, but yanked her
sideways and dumped her on the sofa like a potato sack. She
made for him again, cursing and wailing. But Daddy seemed an
even worse monster, the way hed insulted us.
I charged, nearly slipping on a photo page. Daddy held
me off with one hand. Lousy redskin scum! I said. A curse
good enough for Mama was fine for me. I started to curse him
again when he chopped me in the throat with his hand.
I crashed. It felt like hed knocked my head off. If I
looked back, Id see my body jumping around like a neck-wrung
chickens. I wanted to scream, but couldnt even gargle.
Daddys bloated face came down for a look-see. He
dont favor me, Laurel. And he dont do like I do, neither.
Baseball, Mama said from the sofa. You taught him
how to play. He does that the way you do.
Mebbe so. But its a trick. Daddy gave me a goatish
wink. Well, you bastid, your mamas secrets safe with me.
He slammed out the door without even scrounging up a
change of clothes. Late August, early September, Hitler
messing up folks lives in Europe. You heard about it on the radio.
Like a fight between your parents scrawled in letters the size of
buildings.
Dick! Come back! Mama shouted at Daddy, whod just
said he wasnt. Finally, she realized her boy lay hurt.
My voice box had closed. I sat up amongst black-and-white
portraits, still lifes, scenes of war. Except for the mark on
my throat, I mustve looked more or less okay. When I started
breathing again, I was okay. But I didnt talk again for two
years. And when I did, I st-st-stammered.
On the troop train, I pulled on my clothes
and made my way between curtained berths to the coupling
where I liked to ride. The shanties of poor white and colored
sharecroppers clicked by like old photos, or maybe negatives, of
themselves. They looked as empty as I felt. My voice boxd
closed again. When our locomotive whistled going into the
curve on a kudzu-smothered ridge, I tried to mimic it. I tried
to scream like that monster two-six-two engine.
Nothing came out.
That night between cars lasted forever.
I kept expecting Pumphrey to come through. The sun did come
up, finally, and we rattled into Georgia over the Chattahoochee
River and a swaying trestle bridge. The tracks looked like
poured mercury. Early June, but already godawful hot. If we
stopped in some podunk town or weedy switching yard, gnats
and noseeums attacked us in eggbeater tornadoes.
Oklahoma got hotits dust storms could blast you rawbut
Georgias heat came like the rolling smoke of a junkyard
tire fire. Once, its land had been wooded, but loggers and
peanut fanners had cut the trees and turned it into a clayey
plain. We chugged over it into a sprawl of roadhouses, motor
inns, and billboards: Highbridges outskirts. (Gas rationing
had killed most of the inns and roadhouses.) Camp Penticuff
lay six or seven miles southeast of town. The Panhandle-Seminole
Railway line wed come in on cut a slant through the post.
Civilians got off in town, soldiers kept riding.
Climbing down from the train, I finally saw some of the
other nonmilitary types whod been aboard. They stood in
knots on the platform fanning themselves and greeting friends.
Dont ask me where theyd hid themselves. Id seen mostly
uniforms aboardone damned uniform too many. With all
the signs around asking you to limit your time in the dining car
and to forgive any travel delays, you realized the railroad preferred
military cargo to nonessential civs like me.
At Highbridge station, I began to get scared. Id figured
Mister JayMac would meet me, but Mister JayMac was nowhere
to be found. Now what? If somebody couldve proved to
me that Pumphreyd got off in Alabama, Idve ridden on into
camp with the dogfaces.
Instead, I wandered into the depot. My duffel saved me.
It had a bata red batpoking up through it.
Yoobo? said a high-pitched voice in the gloom. I looked
around, bumpkinlike. Louder, the voice said, Yoobo? I turned
and looked down. There, staring up at me blank-faced out of
chocolately eyes, slouched a twelve- or thirteen-year-old urchin,
barefoot. He wore a too-big mans shirt and shiny cotton
trousers. Little Black Sambo. On top of my manners, I
mightve called him a colored, or a pickaninny. I only had a few
years on him, but at our ages that was a generation. What did
he want? A handout? You Danny Bo? he shouted, like I was
deaf as a jackhammer jockey.
Holy cow. Someone in Highbridgea barefoot nigger
kid out of Uncle Toms Cabinknew my name. Sort of.
Yookla. He stuck out his handto shake, I figured. So I
reached to give his hand a pump. His look curled from blankness
to suspicion. He didnt pump back. His hand dropped
like a slab of raw liver, detouring to my duffel bag, his aim all
along. He was my reception committee, sent out by Mister
JayMac to fetch me to him. Should I feel honored or snubbed?
Cmn, he mumbled, then dragged my duffel through the
waiting room to the street. Out front, at the curb, hulked a
rusty brown-and-white bus, a wingless Flying Fortress. The kid
jumped up its steps and disappeared inside.
The bus had curlicue writing on its side: HIGHBRIDGE
HELLBENDERS. Under that, in smaller letters, TERRORS OF
THE CVL. On the fender above the front wheel ran a line of
script giving the buss nickname: The Brown Bomber,
Well, Mr Boles, you riding or admirin? said a deep
voice from the drivers seat. It belonged to a well-built colored
in his mid to late twenties. He had one big hand on the
steering wheel and one on the door lever. To show him I
couldnt talk, I touched my throat and shook my head. I didnt
want him, nigger or no, thinking I was stuck up.
So thoat? he said. Damn. A so thoat in summers bout
the wusst.
Uh-uh. I waved off his guess, tapping the end of my
tongue with my finger. Passersby gave me looks.
Git on up here, the driver said. Keep that up, somebody
haw you off to the rubber room.
I climbed aboard. The kid with my duffel had gone all
the way to the back. Above a far seat, the top of his head poked
up like a nappy black cactus.
Caint talk, eh? the driver said. I shook my head. Sit
down and lissen, then.
I slid into a seat catawampus to the drivers, sweating so
bad I put a Rorschach blot on it. But for him and my half-pint
porter, I had the Brown Bomber to myself.
At boy back theres Euclid, the driver said. Euclid.
Like the Greek geometry man.
Yookla, I thought. Yookla equaled Euclid.
Im Darius Satterfield. He drew out the long i in the
middle of Darius. Euclids my brother. Fo now, Danl, thats
bout aw you need to know.
Danl, not Mr Boles. A true-born white boy mightve
taken offense, but it never crossed my mind Dariusd overstepped
his place. Besides, nobodyblack, white, or polka dothad
ever called me Mr Boles.
Darius drove us away from the railway depot. Factories
and cars floated by. Giant water oaks and live oaks lined some
of the streets. Toward Highbridges eastern edge, glimpses of
pancake-flat land flickered between mill houses and shanties. A
few soldiers strolled by, but mostly I saw white civiliansuntil,
at least, we reached a market area where colored women
carried baskets of tomatoes, okra, beans, and squash on their
heads. Close by, dusty lots had filled up with covered traps,
mule-drawn wagons, even a couple of ox carts.
I felt like a visitor to Tanganyika. Darius didnt act as a
tour guide, though, and Euclids headd slumped out of sight.
Anyway, everything about Highbridgepart city, part country
crossroadsamazed me: the sights, the smells, the people. I
was a foreigner.
Even in 43, Highbridge had nearly 10,000 people, with
another five or six thousand soldiers, WACs, and support
personnel out to Camp Penticuff. The locals, with the war on,
made a lot of their money off the doughboys. On Penticuff
Strip, which angled southeast from the old business district,
there were pawn shops, beer joints, dancehalls, tattoo parlors,
even some two-buck-a-tussel cathouses. For jobs, the town had
some holdover industries from prewar days: meat-packing
plants, textile mills, foundries. The ironworks now made
torpedoes, though, and a crate-making factory had started turning
out duckboards for trenches and foxholes. Peanuts were the
biggest local crop, but cattle, pecans, and cotton weighed in as
old reliables too.
On a single ride from the railway depot, you couldnt see
everything in Highbridge. If you started regarding it as a sleepy
burg, maybe even malaria-ridden, you began to feel superior to
iteven if you hailed from a no-account town in Oklahoma.
Tenkiller, you figured, at least qualified as a frontier town, but
Highbridge, even if more like an African colonial outpost, gave
itself big-city airs, airs like trying to support a professional ball
club.
In about fifteen minutes, Darius pulled the Brown
Bomber into a parking lot at McKissic Field. The stadium
reared up: tall wooden walls, bleachers like railway trestles,
insect-eye lights on poles above the clubhouse and the outfield.
Even on the bus, I could hear bats cracking, horsehide popping
glove leather, players shouting. Looking at McKissic Fields
rickety outside, I figured not even the New York Yankees had a
stadium as grand.
Come see the end of Mister JayMacs morning
sweatout, Darius said. I wanted to fetch my duffel from Euclid,
thinking I might need my glove, but Darius shook his
head. Naw, naw. Jes you watch today, Danl. Jes be thanking
God the obligation aint on you to huff it up wi them mens
awready out there.
Darius led me through an entrance near the bleachers on
the third-base line. We ducked through a low concrete tunnel
and broke into the ballparks summer dazzle.
Grass you wouldnt believe, trim and green, the pride of
an eager-beaver team of groundskeepers. Even the ads on the
walls seemed magical: signs for local department stores, Octagon
Laundry Soap, Obelisk Self-Rising Flour, War Bonds, Old
Golds, Shelby Razor Blades, 666 Cold Medicine. Most touted
stuff you cant buy now, but, just then, they bamboozled me. I
wanted to dash through the outfield grass (me, a shortstop),
make leaping grabs against the Feen-A-Mint and the Moroline
Petroleum Jelly signs. I wanted to play the caroms off their
paint. And right after the game, Id run downtown to stock up
on chewing gum, cola, soap, smokes, you-name-it.
Lord among us, McKissic Field was Heaven!
Never mind no other park in the CVL, except maybe the
one in LaGrange, could stand beside Mister JayMacs place.
Never mind how quickly I learned even McKissic Field didnt
equal the Land of Beulah. I mean, it had bumps in the infield,
shadowy corners where a fielder could get lost, camelback
crickets in the showers, and split benches in the bleacher sections.
That morning, though, the old stadium dazzled me.
Near the third-base line, Darius hurtled a low wall and
ambled onto the infield grass. He picked up a catchers mitt
and waved it at a player lazing around the batting cage. The
playerPeter Hay, better known as Haystack, but I didnt
know that thenfollowed him to the bullpen, where Darius
squatted and caught Hays warm-up tosses. After a while, Darius
pounded his mitt, asking for more heat; he fired Hays
pitches back harder than Hayd thrown them. Hay struggled to
put more zip into what he was doing. An amazing scene: In a
south Georgia ballpark, a black man instructing, even cussing
out, an older white player.
Nigger gave me that crap, Id deball him with a spoon.
Until then, I hadnt seen the rookiesthree guys in street
clothesin the stands behind me. The kid whod just spoken
hunched between two others about his age, all of them squinting
like moles, each about as nervous and mock-tough as the
other two. The one whod spoken wore caked boots and denim
overalls; he had a blacksmiths arms. He also had, several hours
ahead of schedule, a five-oclock shadow.
Would you let a nigger boss you thataway? he asked
me.
I turned half around. I shrugged.
You a ballplayer? he said. Or Jes lost?
The nigger brought him, one of the other two guys
said. He caint be lost.
Both these fellas had on cheap jackets and ties. They were
taller than the farm boy; next to him, they looked like Esquire
modelsor like theyd mistaken the day for Sunday and McKissic
Field for a concert hall. Their names, I found out later,
were Heggie and Dobbs. The farm boy with the stubble was a
south Georgia cracker name of Philip Ankers.
Hes ugly, though, Ankers said, looking at me. Nothing
that nigger do or say can stop him being ugly.
Maybe these drips were dogfaces on furlough.
Whats yore name? Ankers asked.
I patted my throat and gargled a few gargles. For safetys
sake, I stayed put, three bleacher rows ahead of him.
What is it, Rube? Ya swaller a sock? Or ya jes dont
know yore name?
I gave the farm boy a quick up-yours sign, half expecting
him and his dime-store clothes-horse buddies to come down
and boot the pea-turkey out of me.
But Ankers laughed and said, Screw ya, Rube. His pals
chuckled too. When they started watching the practice again, I
edged over a few feet so they wouldnt be right behind me.
From the mound, Mister JayMac hurled batting practice
into a chicken-wire cage. Criminy. Mister JayMac had his
health, I guess, but the sight of that old guy unleashing strikes
on his own players couldnt help but get you. He creaked some
(not too much), but the dust on his cuffs and the clay on his
shoes didnt faze him. After yanking a swinging strike on a
batter, he made the klutz take three laps. No one, Mister
JayMac said, should flat-out whiff against him. He wasnt Bob
Feller. Or even Lefty Grove. Thing was, though, not many
Hellbenders took Mister JayMac to the outfield, and nobody
hit one over the wall off him.
At Mister JayMacs orders, players changed in and out,
coming in to hit or hustling out to field. Pretty soon, Id
started sizing up the shortstop. The number on his practice
flannels, also the teams away uniforms, was seven. I didnt
expect to move in on this guy unless he produced nothing but
air currents at the plate. He could field, and throw, and think. I
reckoned him at least twice my age, mid-thirties, maybe older,
gray winking at his temples, cowboy creases from his nose to
his lip corners. On every pitch, he crouched so low you wondered
if he had the body grease to unravel and make a play. He
always did, though, and gracefully: a whangdoodle shortstop.
The other big thing I recall about that practice is how
bad the guys playing first base did. Mister JayMac used at least
four fellas there, but not one could handle a first basemans
glove. That leather claw gave them fits. One fella, Norm
Sudikoff, moved pretty as a gazelle, but usually managed to
turn a sure out into a misplay. My pal Goochie wouldve given
all these goons a clinic.
Me, I wished I was six or seven inches taller. Then, if I
couldnt beat out Number Seven at short, I might win a starting
job from the relay team of jokers yo-yoing in and out at
first base. Otherwise, I might spend my whole season on the
bench. Growing a half foot fast would help, but Id do as well
to pray for a Hollywood agent to tap me as the next Gary
Cooper.
At noon, practice ended. Darius hadnt brought me to
McKissic Field so much to watch it as to keep from having to
make an extra trip from the players boardinghouse to the
stadium. Hed picked up the other three rookies, Georgia boys
all, a couple of hours earlier, when a train from the Atlantic
coast had dropped them at Highbridge Station.
Now Darius came over, diamonds winking in the black
lambs wool of his hair, his coffee-colored skin aglow. Yall go
git on the bus. Sit toards the back. The other mens dont like
rookies crowding em.
Who sez? Ankers said to Darius.
Ast em, Darius said. Be my guest. But ast em on the
bus, or yall might have to foot it to Mister JayMacs.
Dobbs and Heggie didnt grumble, but Ankers flicked
Darius a lightning storm with his eyes.
On the bus, these guys sat a row or two in front of
Euclid, now reading a Plastic Man comic, but I plonked down
next to him, not out of any Eleanor Roosevelt fondness for
black folk, but because he had my duffel. He paid me no mind,
poring over his comic like it was a book of secret codes.
In about twenty minutes, ballplayers started straggling
out and climbing aboard, including Darius. Mister JayMac
swung up into the seat back of Dariuss. None of his players
had tried to sit in it, his reserved spot. They always scattered
about here and there, flopping like wore-out bird dogs. Number
Seven, the shortstop, came laddering down the aisle and
dropped into the long rear seat. He stretched his arms along its
back and goggled around.
Hey, Darius, he said, whore these handsome cats?
He meant the three new Georgia boys.
I disremember their names, Mr Hoey. Course Im jes a
driver, not a traveling secretary.
Oh now, Darius, the shortstop said, youre more n a
driver, youre a Hellbender institution.
Hands on the wheel, Darius didnt seem to want any of
Hoeys soft soap and told him so by clamming up. Of all the
men whod practiced that morning, he was the only one still
wearing the clothes hed worked out in. The top of his head
showed in the big rectangular mirror just inside the divided
windshield, his hair asparkle with sweat.
Mister JayMac grabbed the pole of the drivers cage and
pulled himself up. He sported a string tie and a white linen
coat. If we didnt get rolling soon, his ballplayers would start
slinging off enough BTUs to give every last joe aboard a drop-dead
case of heat prostration.
Dont yall worry who thesere boys are, he said. Worry
about how piss-poor yall played today. He paused, more for
effect than from tiredness. I could drum up a half dozen 4-Fs
in a TB ward whod look sharper than yall did this morning.
So think, gentlemen, on your many personal deficiencies.
You could hear Euclid turning comic-book pages.
Understand? Mister JayMac said.
Yessir! nearly everyone on the Bomber said, like recruits
out to Camp Penticuff.
Meeting in the parlor this evening right after supper,
Mister JayMac said. I want everybody there. Understood?
Everybody? the infielder named Hoey said. Even
Jumbo?
I said everybody.
So why wasnt Jumbo at practice, sir? Number Seven
said. We couldve used him at first. His subs made him look
like Nijinski. Compared to those galoots, he is Nijinski.
Take a leap, Buck! Norm Sudikoff shouted.
Jumbo Hank Clerval had some personal business in Alabama
to attend to, Mister JayMac said. Hell be at our
meeting tonight, Mr Hoey, never you fear.
Buck Hoey, the shortstop, just wouldnt let up: Alabama?
Howd Jumbo get to Alabama?
He borrowed my car, Mister JayMac said,
Your Caddy? Hoey said. Howd Jumbo get to be such
a privileged character? Going four for four gainst Marble
Springs? Shit-a-load, sir, I once hit for the cycle gainst those
palookas, and you never loaned me a car. Whats Jumbo got
anyway? Proof of some kinda draft-board hanky-panky?
The other men on the Brown Bomber ducked; they cowered
in their places. The only soul among us not drawn gut-tight
with shock and worry, except maybe Hoey, was Euclid.
He was paging through Plastic Man for maybe the twentieth
time.
Let it go, Mr Hoey, Mister JayMac said.
Jesus, Hoey started. Youd think the guy was
Let it go.
Hoey let it go. Didnt seem too trodden upon, though.
He seemed happy. Mister JayMac sat down. Darius put the bus
in gear, and we bumped out of the parking lot onto a boulevard
lined with water oaks. Hoey caught my eye and waved at
all the browbeaten ballplayers in front of us.
Ever see such a bunch of pantywaists? he asked.
I could only look at him. Hoey was the stud Id have to
beat out to become a regular. Worse luck, he was lean, tough,
and not to be messed with.
S matter with you, kid? Cat got your tongue?
Darius drove us to McKissic House, the
team boardinghouse where Mister JayMac, for part of everyones
monthly salary, put up all the single men on his team. In
McKissic House, this entire summer, Id eat my meals and
spend my nights when the Hellbenders didnt have an away
game.
Cripes, I thought when our bus growled up the semicircular
drive. How great, not to have to wear down my shoe
leather looking for a place to rentespecially with Camp
Penticuff so close and wartime housing so tight that roomers
doubling up with relatives or friends matter-of-factly read the
obits to get a jump on likely vacancies.
Because Mister JayMac owned a dozen or more old mill
houses in the Cotton Creek area of Highbridge, hed taken that
worry off all his players shoulders. Men with wives and kids in
town, I learned later, rented these tarboxes from Mister JayMac
for at least six months, April through September, his minimum
lease. In October, hed offer his vacant houses to military
transients, but with the stipulation they clear out at the end of
March so married Hellbenders could reclaim the premises in
time for the new season. In a military town with beaucoups of
demand for rental properties, he had a high-handed marketing
approach, maybe even a greedy-seeming one, but Mister
JayMac didnt care about the money he could makehe could
do that renting to either GIs or playersbut about the welfare
of his immediate employees during each CVL season. So most
of us looked at Mister JayMac not as a robber baron but as our
very own Daddy Warbucks.
Only two-thirds of the Hellbenders made the trip all the
way from McKissic Field to McKissic House. Darius drove
first to the Cotton Creek neighborhood, where six men rented
houses, and dropped them off. Buck Hoey, the wiseguy shortstop
whod bellyached about the first baseman who hadnt
come to practice, hopped down last, near a blue frame house
with more shrubs and a prettier paint job than any house
around it. When Hoey got off, I relaxed a bit.
As for McKissic House, it hunkered back from Angus
Road, on a woodsy stand of acreage on Highbridges
southeastern corner, floating among the magnolias and the
leafy pecan trees like a man-of-war. It had cupolas, turrets,
gables, a widows walk, and a pair of outside staircases for fire
escapes. It wasnt Tara, though: no columns. Also, Mister
JayMacs ancestors had built it after, not before, the War Between
the States.
The front half of the house smacked your eyes out. It had
a wrap-around porch with fresh-painted balusters and a half
dozen or more rocking chairs. It had shutters and a huge oaken
door with a stained-glass fanlight above it. It had plum-colored
draperies in the windows and umbrella ferns in hanging baskets.
The whole place shone white, like some kind of lighter-than-air marble.
Coming around the drive, though, you saw that the back
part of McKissic House didnt keep up appearances. No shutters
on the sides. In places, boards overlapped on a fallen slant.
Paint had cracked or curled or flaked or flat-out vanished. One
tricky back wall had a two-tone color, light above and dark
below, like an unfinished kitchen cabinet nailed to a barns
weathered side. I still liked what I saw. It outdid any place Id
ever lived. It had such size and so many build-ons I imagined
myself prowling through it for weeks, finding hidden passages,
secret nooks, the decaying skeletons of roomers whod lost
their way and starved to death. McKissic House spoke to the
strangled poet in me, stirring a wormy sort of dread into my
blood. Could I last a whole summer in one of its closed-in
rooms?
You new boys, Mister JayMac said from the buss step
well, make yourselves to home, best yall can. Suppers at five-thirty,
team meeting an hour later. Dariusll settle you in.
Tomorrow, spot challenges and an intrasquad tussel of big-time
importance.
Mister JayMac got off, climbed the wide fan of steps into
McKissic House, and went inside. Everybody else but Darius,
me, Euclid, and the other three rookies piled out after him.
Shoo, Darius said. Kizzyll give you somethin befo
dinner. Yall gots to be hongry.
Ankers, Dobbs, and Heggie got off the bus and jostled
up the steps. I held my seat.
Darius said, You deef as well as dumb? He regarded me
in the rearview.
I shook my head. I thought Darius would coddle me a
tad, give me a little encouragement. Instead, he shut the Brown
Bombers door and jammed the bus into gear. He bounced it
off the gravel drive, through a lane of pecans and dogwoods,
and past one of McKissic Houses shabby pine-board fire escapes
to the backyard. To keep from cracking my head on the
buss tin ceiling, I hung on for precious life.
Darius braked by a screened-in porch on the side of the
house, not far from an old carriage house. The porchs fly-blown
screen had tears in it; its splintery steps, just off the
kitchen, canted this way and that. The houses rain gutters had
rusted through; sections hung loose, like chutes at a gravel
quarry. The eaves, if you looked up from under, had neat little
holes bored into them, like somebodyd corkscrewed hooks in
there, to swing mum or begonia pots from. Carpenter bees had
drilled the holes, though, not a flower-mad lodger. The only
decorations between the porch and the carriage house were a
compost heap, some rusted-out metal pans, and a tractor
cannibalized for war scrap.
Through the porch screen, I could see a long row of
kitchen windows. Through those windows, the yarny-looking
gray head of a colored woman bobbed back and forth behind a
counter. The womans face had caved-in cheeks, bulgy lips and
eyes, and a beaklike nose. Her hair had braided rat tails coming
down behind her head and over her shoulders to the front, a
more squawlike than a mammylike do. From the bus, her head
seemed to lack a body; it rolled here and there in the kitchens
steam and clatter.
Kizzy, Darius said. She either feed you or use you in a
pie. Whynt you see which it gon be today?
Just then, though, I saw Mister JayMac strolling through
a big victory garden toward the old servant quarters behind the
main house: a neat little bungalow. It had hydrangea bushes
with smoky blue flowers big as cabbages, and a red-tile roof
that made it look more Spanish than Suthren.
Office back there, Darius told me. Office and bedroom.
Him and Miss Giselle got to have they privacy. I
watched Mister JayMac amble, thinking Darius might say
more, but he added only, Git out, Danl. Go on. Git.
I stood up. Id reached my home. Never mind I had no
notion what to do now or even how to make my feet move.
Holy Jesus, Darius said. He came down the aisle,
grabbed my arm, and dragged me off the bus and up the
decaying steps into the kitchen. This young man hongry and
speechless, he said. Feed him, Kizzy, but dont spec no
thanks. He slammed on out of the kitchen through a swinging
door more like youd see in a restaurant than in an old Victorian
home.
Euclid came through another door from the dining room
and the parlor beyond, where Hellbender ballplayers, from kids
like me to grizzled codgers like Creighton Nutter, were listening
to the news and debating the capture of Attu in the Aleutians.
Stupid, somebody said. Shoulda let the Japs have it.
Two-bit icy rock aint worth one GIs life, much less five hunnerds.
You betcha, a second player said. Troops up thered be
more use here to home kicking striking miners butts.
You dont know squat, Fanning, somebody else said.
My dad mined coal. If not for baseball, the minesd have me
too.
And so on. I remember the argument because my dream
of Umnak and the tidal wave of Marsden plates clattering
down still sprocketed through my head. I could close my eyes
and relive the nightmare in milky black-and-white.
Euclid gave me his Plastic Man comic book. He climbed
up on a stool next to the wood stove and asked for something
to eat. Kizzy poured him a fruit jar of buttermilk and gave him
a plate of tomato slices with a crumbly chunk of cornbread.
Danbo too, Awnt Kiz, he said.
Whynt you eat in the dining room wi the other mens?
Kizzy asked me. Got a full spread out there.
I shook my head. Theyd ask me questions, just like that
farm boy Ankers at McKissic Field had done, and the silence I
gave them back would irk or tickle them in troublesome ways.
Kizzy (if she was Euclids aunt, she had to be Dariuss
too) had hands like long ash-colored mackerels. She sliced me
a chunk of cornbread and sloshed me a glass of buttermilk
even bigger than Euclids fruit jar. I wolfed the cornbread and
the buttermilk standing at a dough-rolling counter in the middle
of the kitchen, sweating in the heat pouring off the wood
stove. The kitchens wallpapercalico-gowned ladies and top-hatted
men on old-timey bicyclespeeled in strips, steamed
away by heat and the fumes from boiling kettles of greens or
tea.
Meetin in parlor, six-thuddy, Euclid said. He put a
dollop of strawberry jam on his cornbread and wedged the
whole chunk into his mouth. Yo hea?
Kizzy gave me all I could eat, including a
bowl of greens with some pepper sauce and a piece of cold
chicken, and shoved me into the backyard with my comic book
and a baseball-sized green apple.
Iw caw you fo supper, she said.
I sat in the rusty metal seat of the junked tractor reading
Plastic Man and shooing away noseeums. From the parlor, I
could hear dance music on the radio, jokey arguments over a
hearts game, a soap opera, more war news. I dozed, tuckered
from my train ride. I woke and thumbed back through Euclids
comic. I dozed again. Next time I woke, I got down from the
tractor and explored the houses spread-out grounds. I stood
clear of the bungalow out back, out of respect for Mister
JayMac and Miss Giselles privacy, and maybe the simple fear
hed shotgun me if I bothered them. Eventually, I dozed off
again.
Danbo, Euclid said. Suppa.
I didnt want to, but I ate with the other players boarding
in McKissic House. Counting me, sixteen fellas crowded the
long table. Lon Musselwhite, the teams six-foot-four left
fielder and the biggest man in the dining room, had the seat of
honor next to the kitchen. (Musselwhite was team captain.)
The chair at the tables foot, more a throne than a piece of
furniture, stayed empty, even though Kizzy had set it a place. I
guessed it was for Mister JayMac, whod show up when he felt
like it. Reese Curriden, the third baseman, and Q. U. Parris, a
pitcher nicknamed Quip, served us, toting bowls of vegetables
and plates of meat in from the kitchen so Kizzy wouldnt drop
dead trying to do everything alone.
Dont fret, Reese Curriden told us newcomers. This is
just a get-acquainted deal. Yallll get your shot next week.
KP, Quip Parris said. He was short, blond as wheat,
and triggered like a clock spring. Soon enough, I learned he
saw himself as the linchpin of the pitching staff. He hailed
from Raleigh, North Carolina. His initials stood for Quintus
Uriah, which explains why everybody called him Quip.
With nearly all the food on the table, Musselwhite
rapped his spoon against his tea glass and said, Yall please
bow. Everyone bowed. Kizzy came back in with three banana
cream pies on a rack of lacquered dowels. She sighed loudly.
Sweet and holy Jesus, Musselwhite said, thy blessings on the
lady that prepared these victuals, the victuals themselves, and
all who aim to eat em. Give us strengthalso victories over
our CVL enemies, as Thou dost give our fighting forces victories
over the Nips and Krauts. Amen.
Amen, said everybody at table.
Pass them ol field peas, Musselwhite said.
Bowls began shuttling around. Kizzy finally got to
squeeze her rack of meringue-topped pies onto the table.
Okay, fellas, Musselwhite said, innerduce yourselves.
He served himself field peas, tomatoes, fried squash, okra,
butter beans, green beans, and mashed potatoes. He grabbed
off several biscuits and forked up a breaded pork chop, a slice
of ham, a batter-fried chicken breast. I followed suit.
Players introduced themselves. In addition to Reese Curriden
and Quip Parris, we heard from Clarence Trapdoor
Evans, Burt Fanning, Lamar Knowles, Charlie Jorgensen, Sweet
Gus Pettus, Vito Mariani, Jerry Wayne Sosebee, Rick Roper,
and Percy Double Dunnagin. Us newcomers to Highbridge
included Philip Ankers, the farm boy whod called me ugly;
Jefferson Dobbs, alias Skinny; and Junior Heggie, shy and
decent and maybe a tad smarter than the other two rookies.
Lon Musselwhite pointed his butter knife at me. Okay,
champ, whore you?
On one of her glide-throughs from the kitchen, Kizzy
said, He dont talk, but you can caw him Danny Bowes.
Boles, I wanted to correct her; not Bowes.
Why the hell dont he talk? Musselwhite said.
Maybe hes taken a vow of silence, Vito Mariani said.
You figure him for another damned Papist? Musselwhite
said. Uh-uh. Hes got Primitive Pentecostal writ all
over him.
Darius told me hes a born-again shortstop, Quip Parris
said, with serious plans to excommunicate Hoey.
Hallelujah, Lamar Knowles, the second baseman, said;
he said it quietlike, but everybody heard him.
Careful, Rick Roper, a utility player, said. Heggie may
be out for you like Bowes is out for Hoey.
Boles, I thought: Boles! I tried to talk. What I got was a
loud gargle that shut me up quicker than a right jab to the
mouth. I could feel myself reddening, burning like Id plunged
my whole head into a bucket of liniment.
Musselwhite had just started to speak when the biggest,
nigh-on to ugliest, man Id ever seen came lumbering in. He
had to stoop to get under the transom between the dining
room and the parlor. Like Ankers, he wore overalls. His overalls
were the biggest pair Id ever seen, enough denim to outfit
every man jack in an Oklahoma oil field. He also wore a long-sleeved
white shirt and a brown cap with a fancy H for Highbridge
on it. His face was out of alignment somehow, like a
pumpkin cut in two and put back together wrong. It even had
the color of a blotchy pumpkin. He looked semi-Oriental. At
the corners of his bottom lip, two pale scars rucked up, like
lopsided buttons. His eyes brimmed with a yellow goo. He
wiped them with the back of one meaty hand, then wiped that
hand on his overalls. His bare feet reminded me of gray rubber
galoshes, but they were only feeta Titans feet, with horny
calluses, ropy veins, and ingrown toenails.
The Titan pulled out the thronelike chair at the end of
the table and lowered himself into it. Even sitting, he had a
good foot on Musselwhite. A helluvan entrance. Ankers, Heggie,
and Dobbs had frozen in place, with tea glasses or forks
lifted to their mouths. Me too, I guess.
Gentlemen, meet Jumbo Hank Clerval, Musselwhite
said. Glad you could join us, Jumbo.
Thank you. The big guys voice was like a ships gun
booming over deep water.
Meet the new guys, Musselwhite said. Ankers, Dobbs,
Heggie, and Bowes. Bowes is their silver-tongued spokesman.
Call him Boles, Parris said. With an l.
Delighted to meet yall, Jumbo said, glancing at us with
what seemed like real curiosity. Despite the yall, he had a
Frenchified accent, an odd lilt that rode the natural booming of
his voice. Jumbohow else could I think of him?turned to
me. How do yall like Highbridge, Mr Boles?
Boles aint my spokesman, Ankers said. I am.
Actually, Mr Clerval, Danny caint talk, Junior
Heggie said, a hiccup in his voice. Everybody, including Jumbo and
me, looked at Junior as if hed belched at a piano recital. Not
that I didnt welcome his explanation; only that, being so bashful,
hed boggled us all just by speaking. But Im shore he can
play ball, he hurried to add.
He looks like a player, Jumbo said.
He looks like a chitlin with ears, Trapdoor Evans said.
I flushed tomato-red again. The whole table, except for
Heggie and Jumbo, guffawed. In Jumbos case, I couldnt tell if
he hated jabs at peoples looks or if he had the sense of humor
of a cast-iron pot. In my view, Evans hadnt meant to hurt me;
just to get off a funny saying, a josh.
Too bad about your disability, Mr Boles, Jumbo said.
Im Henry Clerval. Muscleshe nodded at Lon
Musselwhitehas an imperfect grasp of the etiquette of
introductions.
Mariani whistled, meaning, Boy, he popped you, Muscles,
but Jumbo frowned at the other guys sniggerings.
Youre a big one to talk about my imperfect Emily
Posts, Musselwhite said. Coming down here with your cap
on. You owe the house kitty a dime, Jumbo.
A dime! the ballplayers all cried. Ante up! Ante up!
Jumbos yellow eyes darted. Bare feet were okay at Kizzys
table, I guess, but wearing a cap indoors was a McKissic House
no-no. Like youd been raised in a pigsty. Jumbo yanked it off
and pressed it down into his lap, out of sight. His hair was
greasy black, with a shock of silver-white in the middle of his
lumpy forehead and streaks of nickel-gray around his mangled-looking
ears. Cripes, I thought, if you staggered into him on a
pitch-black street, the fellad give you about twelve quick heart
attacks. Even the overhead lights and the ragging of his fellow
Hellbenders couldnt hide his weirdness. I was ugly, but this
guyd been put together in a meat-packing plant by clumsy
blind men.
Everyone called Clerval Jumbo, including Musselwhite,
and Musselwhite towered over half the guys on the team. It was
scary, those two big palookas sitting there and Jumbo making
Musselwhite look like a midget. I wanted to bolt for my room,
but I didnt have a room yet. About then, a line job at Deck
Glider back in Tenkiller didnt seem so bad a fate.
Although I didnt get up and run, I had a devil of a time
eating. Not Jumbo. He anted up his dime and dug in, paying
no attention to the war talk, baseball gossip, and gripes about
wages or family problems going on around him. He asked for,
or picked off in the passing, every bowl of vegetables on the
table. In fact, he wiped out the mashed potatoes, the field peas,
the okra, and the squash. He drank a pitcher of water. He
inhaled half a wheel of cornbread and a dozen biscuits. He cut
one of Kizzys banana cream pies in two and knocked back half
of it like it was a jigger of hooch. The last to stumble in, he
finished chowing down first, then laid his greasy napkin aside
and sazed cowlike and content around him.
Please excuse me, he said to Muscles in his bassoon of
a voice.
Youre excused. Musselwhite gnawed on his second or
third pork chop. If theres an excuse for you.
Jumbo said, Gentlemen, then unfolded upward from
his chair. He ducked out clutching his Hellbenders cap and
made his way up the foyer staircase. The stairs creaked under
him (but not much more than they wouldve for Junior Heggie
or me); and he disappeared, leaving behind a fleet of empty
bowls, his own slick china plate, and a table of half-amazed
men. Not even the old hands, it hit me, had totally adjusted to
either his looks or the shows he put on at mealtimes.
The Great Thunderfoot, Reese Curriden said.
Hell, thats Sudikoff, Trapdoor Evans said. Jumbos
dainty next to Sudikoff. A regular twinkletoes.
Sudikoff, a married fella, wasnt there to defend himself.
He was chief backup at first base, though: the graceful lummox
whod tried to fill in for Jumbo at practice.
I cant recall much else about my first sit-down meal in
Highbridge, not even if I got a piece of Kizzys banana cream
pie, a treat renowned countywide. Jumbos performance wiped
every later impression of that meal right out of my head.
Soon after, every Hellbender, including
married fellas from the Cotton Creek district, along with our
driver and unofficial team manager, Darius Satterfield, had
crowded into the parlor for Mister JayMacs big meeting.
The only person not there to begin with was Jumbo
Clerval, who, like Buck Hoey had charged that afternoon,
seemed to have a weird privileged-character status. Well, why
not? When does a gorilla show up for dinner? Whenever he
damn well feels like it.
Anyway, the parlor burst with edgy ballplayers, not
counting Jumbo. Sweat ran down my sides. Every face in the
room, even with a fan creaking overhead, looked greasily sequin-sprinkled.
Chairs, footstools, sofa backs, even the floorplayers
sat or sprawled on any sort of furniture, or surface, they
could find.
In wrinkled seersucker trousers and a sweated-out dress
shirt, Mister JayMac had worked his way, along with Darius,
to the front of the parlor. Darius set up an easel and a book of
flip charts to help Mister JayMac explain the Hellbenders and
the CVL to Ankers, Dobbs, Heggie, and me. It meant a tedious
rehash for the old hands, but nobody squawked. Not
even Buck Hoey, who perched on a sofa back to the rear, an
expression on his face like, Hey, what a welcome refresher,
were all so lucky to get the full scoop again.
Gentlemen, hayseeds, and hangers-on, Mister JayMac
said when Darius had his flip charts ready. As most of yall
know, we play a seventy-seven-game season. Today, after a
month of what passes for some of yall as top-notch baseball,
were a shabby seven and eight, five games back o the Opelika
Orphans, a crew I once wouldnt have reckoned fit to climb a
molehill without succumbing to oxygen deprivation. Muscles
called them mewling pansies, and we trail them by five. So
what does that make us?
Pansy chasers, Buck Hoey said.
Nobody laughed. Like Jumbo, though, Buck Hoey seemed to have a
special status; he could rag the bosssomewithout
getting sent to his room. Anyway, I felt again how
hard it would be to take his job away. And if I did, the other
guys would probably resent my quick success.
Mister JayMac looked around. Wheres jumbo? Didnt
he make it back for supper?
Like the locust made it to Pharaohs Egypt, Hoey said.
That line did get a laugh.
So where is he now? What the hells he doing?
Conferring with Count Tallywhacker, Hoey said.
Thats why its taking him, uh, so long.
A kind of hesitant edgy laugh this time. Mister JayMac
curled his lip the way you would if a whiff of spoiled poultry
spilled from your Frigidaire. But he sent Euclid upstairs to
fetch Jumbo from his third-floor apartment.
So looong, Hoey said as Euclid went by. This time, half a
dozen guys whooped like world-champion morons.
Hush, Mister JayMac said. I realized then, or gradually over the
next few days, that Mister JayMac never said, Shut up. Id
heard a lot of Shut ups in my short life, so I liked the way he
said Hush instead.
Any of yall whove been dogging itd better look sharp,
he said. Were taking on some young fellas who can play. Ive
seen em. This isnt hearsay, but observed fact.
High school wonders, Buck Hoey said.
Perhaps, Mister JayMac said. But I dont like being
tied for fourth place in this league, and I wont allow us to stay
in fourth if good alternatives to mediocrity present themselves.
Maybe they already have.
Euclid came into the parlor ahead of Jumbo Clerval, who,
by the looks of him, had dressed for the meeting. He wore a
humongous pair of wingtip Florsheims, a pair of patched gray
pants, and a shiny black frock coat. Euclid played tug to
Jumbos ocean liner and, as soon as he got the big man among
us, tooted on out of the room. Jumbos head, capless now,
spiked up almost to the picture molding. He slouched against
the wall, straight across the doorway from Buck Hoey on the
broken-backed sofa. It looked as if Mister JayMac might say
something to him, bawl him out even, but he didnt. He nodded
at us four rookies.
Yall come up here. I want everybody to see you.
Ankers, Dobbs, Heggie, and I sidled to the front of the
room to stand beside the easel. Ankers mayve been the only
one of us not unsettled by the spotlight. When Mister JayMac
introduced us, he stepped out and gave a clasped-hands salute,
like a boxer greeting a ringside crowd.
High school graddyiots, Hoey said.
Actually, Mr Ankers has only completed his sophomore
year, Mister JayMac said.
The Hellbenders stared at Ankers like he was a sideshow
freak. Unless hed been held back a time or two, he was fifteen
years old, a baby with the stubble of a lumberjack.
All right, Mister JayMac said, give these fellas a
friendly Hellbender hello. Ready? Hip, hip . . .
Hooray, the regulars said, without much in it.
Mister JayMac told them to try again. Hooray! they
said, with maybe an exclamation point. Again, he said. They
did a third cheer so loud it more or less mocked the idea of
hip-hip-hooraying. But Mister JayMac nodded and tapped a
pointer on the first page of his chart:
CHATTAHOOCHEE VALLEY LEAGUE / CLASS C PROFESSIONALS.
Ever last fella here ought to be reminded how damned
lucky yall are to be playing ball, he said. You could be
training as infantry replacements with all the scared puppies
out to Camp Penticuff. Or crawling on your guts toward a
bunker full of deadeye Jerries or Japs.
We could all be dead, Hoey said.
You could indeed!. Mister JayMac roared. But no,
thank God, yallre privileged to be playing baseball, the national
pastime, and getting paid for that hardship to boot!
Some of you guysre getting paid? Hoey said.
Can it, Hoey, Lon Musselwhite said.
Major league baseball continues on presidential sufferance
and the affections of our war-weary citizens. Minor league
ball is wounded. Nationwide, the farm system is down to ten
training leagues in only seventy cities, and, as I know from my
work on the draft board, Uncle Sam needs even more able-bodied
men to defeat the foes of democracy abroad.
Listen up now, Mister JayMac went on. The Chattahoochee
Valley League, one of the youngest around, is a small-town
league, with a pitiful C training classification, but we
make it in spite of the war because were the hardest-playing
saps anywhere and flat-out beaucoups of fun to watch.
Wouldnt you agree, Mr Nutter?
Yessir. Creighton Nutter was a married relief pitcher, a
balding guy in his late thirties.
In addition, Mister JayMac said, our eight teams are
near to one another. The President and the Office of Price
Administration appreciate the fact it doesnt siphon off all that
much gas or use up that much tire rubber for one CVL team to
travel to another CVL teams field for a three- or four-game
series. Jes last year, the Attorney General said the CVL is the
only league hes ever visited where the National Anthem plays
at the end as well as at the start of every contest. A tribute to
our national pride. Let me further remind yall that FDR himself
views ballplayers as morale boosters and heroes. I concur.
At least the good ones are. The bad ones, on the other hand,
are
Traitors. Jumbos judgment boomed and echoed.
It stopped Mister JayMac for a second. Near to, he
said. Playing the national pastime bad is like spitting on Old
Glory. A sorry bungler may not purposely affront the game,
but its still damnably hard to forgive him.
Amen, Lon Musselwhite said.
Mister JayMac turned to us rookies. Mr Boles, tell us
the locations and names of the eight teams in the CVL.
My tongue jumped to the roof of my mouth. My eyes cut
around like minnows. The last time Id been in Mister
JayMacs presence, Id had at least stammering use of my own
tongue. He remembered that.
Tell us one team in the CVL, Mister JayMac said. Other
than the Hellbenders.
Speak up, dummy! Hoey shouted this out.
Darius, over Mister JayMacs shoulder, said, The Boles
boy is a dummy, sir. Got no voice.
Mister JayMac gave me a startled, put-out look. Like hed
asked for swordfish steak and the waiterd brought him a lousy
crawdad. Quick, though, his gaze jumped over to Junior Heggie,
and he asked Junior to do the naming I couldnt.
The Opelika Orphans, Junior Heggie said.
Well, sure, Mister JayMac said. Name the other six.
Junior studied his shoes. He came from the other side of the state.
Itdve been easier for him to name the last six British
prime ministers.
Darius, the chart, Mister JayMac said. Darius flipped
the top sheet over the back of the easel and showed us a new
page. General JayMac, an Allied officer in a secret command
post, briefing his staff.
All right. Look here. He rapped the chart with the top
half of a collapsible pool cue:
TOWN | POP. | NICKNAME | STADIUM | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Highbridge | 14,012 | Hellbenders | McKissic Field | |
LaGrange | 15,301 | Gendarmes | The Prefectures | |
Marble Springs | 8,205 | Seminoles | Seminole Park | |
Quitman | 11,153 | Mockingbirds | The Aviary |
Cottonton | 4,251 | Boll Weevils | The Fields | |
Eufaula | 7,908 | Mudcats | Lakeview Park | |
Lanett | 6,102 | Linenmakers | Chattahoochee Field | |
Opelika | 12,027 | Orphans | Opelika Stadium |
Mister JayMac told us something about each franchise:
what big league club it belonged to, its strengths and short-comings,
and why Highbridge, given our talent, should be in
first place.
Gentlemen, its a minor disgrace that after fifteen games
were tied for fourth behind the Orphans, the Gendarmes, and the
Mudcats. Its a major disgrace were tied with that sorry
crew from Cottonton. Cottonton! A hole in the road! Theyve got
chickens on Main! I once saw a goatan animalfigure in
a call over there! He banged his pool-cue pointer on the flip
chart. It ripped the page listing the CVLs franchises. Most of
the Weevils are ex-semipros off mill teams. Theyre hacks and
mercenaries. Its absurd to be locked in a fourth-place tie with
em. Absurd! The pointer whacked the chart, and all us rookies,
except maybe Ankers, flinched.
Steady down, Mister JayMac, Darius said.
Mister JayMac steadied. He left off being a high-powered
general and became instead a low-key explainerall Dariuss
doing, as maybe only Junior Heggie and I noticed.
All right. Weve got ex-major leaguers in this room. I
want those men to raise their hands.
Youdve figured that with so many old guys on the team,
journeymen players sliding into middle age and past, maybe
five or six wouldve had at least a few at bats or some heavy-duty
bench time in the bigs. But only two men raised their
hands; neither, it did my soul good to see, was Buck Hoey.
You gentlemen come up here, Mister JayMac said. He
tapped the floor, and two fellas Idve never guessed shuffled to
the front of the room. Ex-big leaguers! Even Ankers got excited.
Huzza! Hoey called. Failures! They went up, but they
came back down! Joshing, but not totally. His little barb rang
true.
Failures! some other guys chanted. Failures!
At least we made it up, Creighton Nutter said,
I think you made it all up. You and Dunnagins adventures
in the bigsre all in your heads. Laughter. Musselwhite
was captain, but Hoey did his bit as official team comedian.
In the record books, you mean, Nutter said.
Nutter and Dunnagin, our former Showmen. Nutter reminded
me of the chip-on-his-shoulder second barber in a
two-man shop, a fella who argues because hes sick of playing
second fiddle. He had acorn-colored skin, which hed probably
got from a north Georgia farmer with Cherokee blood.
Dunnagin was thirty-eight or -nine, a mick with jet-black
hair and eyes as blue as core samples of Canadian sky. His
upper body said weight lifter; his legs said whooping crane. At
practice that morning hed worn full catchers gear: chest pad,
shin guards, birdcage, the works. Even then Id noticed his shin
guards were wider than his thighs. You expected him to tumble
over, like a tower of alphabet blocks with a block too many at
the top.
Tell them who you played for, Mr Nutter, Mister
JayMac said, and what kind of record you compiled.
Murder, Hoey said. Corrupting female minors.
Nutter blew off the kibitzing. In 1927, I pitched in
nineteen games for the Boston Braves. Seventy-six innings.
Ah, but your record, Hoey said. Tell us your
record.
Nutter glanced over at Mister JayMac, who gave him a
nod. I was four and seven with two saves. My ERA was . . .
5.09.
Total silence. Hoey mayve already known Nutters
record, but most of the other Hellbenders didnt.
Four and seven, said Vito Mariani, himself a pitcher.
Not so hot. That earned run average aint so hot either.
Mr Mariani, you have no ERA in the majors at all,
Mister JayMac said. And theres not another pitcher in Highbridge
today with more big-league victories than Mr Nutter
nailed down for the Braves. Give him the respect due him.
Ankers started clapping, the rest of us joined in. Nutter
glued his chin to his chest, but smiled an angry-barber smile,
like he disagreed with a customers opinion of the New Deal
but didnt want to job his tip by saying so aloud.
Very well, Mr Dunnagin, Mister JayMac said, tell us
in what capacity you reached the bigs and how you fared
there.
Dunnagin stood like a Marine at parade rest. I went up
as a puling babe with the St. Louis Browns in 1924. I played
reserve catcher and pinch hit for all or parts of the next six
seasons.
After which the Browns cut you? Mister JayMac asked.
Nosir. In 1929, my pas business hit an iceberg. I quit
the Browns to take care of my folks, God rest them.
Hoey faked playing a violin. Imagine, though. Dunnagin
had played in the majors two years before I was born. Hed
held on to a Browns roster spot for six years! And the club
hadnt dumped him for half-assed play. Hed quit to sweep up
the debris of a family disaster. Now, a dozen years down the
line, he was trying to earn another berth in the bigs.
Tell the boys your nickname, Hoey said. His violinist
act hadnt made anybody laugh, so he was trying something
else.
Double, Dunnagin said. My teammates on the
Browns called me Double. In my first-ever at bat, against the
Yankees, I slapped a two-bagger off Bullet Joe Bush. The ball
scooted into the alley between Witt and Ruth. Well, I thought,
Im on my way. Look out, Cobb. Look out, Ruth and
Hornsby.
Go on, Percy, Hoey said. Tell em the rest.
Double worked as a nickname later not because I regularly
knocked out two-baggers, Dunnagin said, but because I
had a bad tendency to ground into double plays every time the
Browns looked like they might score. He stared past Clerval
into the foyer, where a grandfather clockd begun to bong.
Son, youre modest to a sadistic extreme, Mister
JayMac told Dunnagin. Tell them about your best year.
I hit .330 in 1926, Dunnagin said, reciting it by rote
and looking bored. In ninety-four at bats, I had two home
runs and fourteen doubles. But with more at bats in 27 and
28, my average fell off over sixty points both years.
Which means hedve still outhit all but three other
Hellbender starters here with us this evening, Mister JayMac
said. A hand for Mr Dunnagin, please.
This time I led the applause. So what if hed last put on
his catchers getup for the Browns the year the stock market
crashed? We had a near legend for a teammate, a fella whod
once hit over .300 in the bigs.
With this leadership, Mister JayMac said, we belong
in a tie for fourth about as much as Patton and Montgomery
belong in a tie for anything with von Arnim and the Eye-talians.
(No offense, Mr Mariani.) So look to these men as inspiration
and examples. Thank you, gentlemen.
Nutter and Dunnagin returned to their spots in the parlor.
Junior Heggie started to follow, but Mister JayMac halted
him with the pointer. Stay. Were not quite finished. Darius.
He whacked the chart. Darius folded the franchise sheet over
the back of the easel to show us a new page:
TEAM | WINS | LOSSES | PERC. | GAMES BEHIND |
---|---|---|---|---|
Opelika | 12 | 3 | .800 | - |
LaGrange | 10 | 5 | .666 | 2 |
Eufaula | 9 | 6 | .600 | 3 |
HIGHBRIDGE | 7 | 8 | .466 | 5 |
Cottonton | 7 | 8 | .466 | 5 |
Quitman | 6 | 9 | .400 | 6 |
Marbe Springs | 5 | 10 | .333 | 7 |
Lanett | 3 | 12 | .200 | 9 |
Remember, gentlemen, Mister JayMac said, yall
havent even played the Gendarmes or Linenmakers yetone
of the best teams and the absolute sorriest. So, mostly, weve
lost to mediocrities and also-rans. Were I given to worry, Id be
a total ruin. But Ive long since taken to heart the scriptural
counsel that anxious thought adds not a minute to our lives,
and I sleep like a babe in swaddling clothes.
Jesus, Hoey said, not exactly reverently.
Selah, Mister JayMac said. Ive prayed and Ive
rounded up these fresh-faced youths.
Glory! Quip Parris said. What if theyre bums, sir?
Mister JayMac smiled. If yall wanted aiggs, would I foist
on you scorpions?
Dont like aiggs, Burt Fanning said. No one else said a
word, not even Buck Hoey.
And so, gentlemen, I give you Messieurs Ankers, Boles,
Heggie, and Dobbs, Mister JayMac said. Theyll no doubt
irk a few of yall, but I also expect em to be a hypodermic in
this teams draggy ass. Now, give em another Hellbender welcome.
A smattering of claps. Hoey, Jumbo, and Parris didnt
clap at all. But this time, Mister JayMac didnt jump all over
his men for cold-shouldering us.
He had Darius flip the chart page. Another chart came
up. Then another one after that. And so on. A chart showing
which CVL teams had ex-big leaguers. A map of Highbridges
business district, another of the part of town called Penticuff
Strip, and even one of Camp Penticuff itself, down to parade
grounds, dining halls, obstacle courses, and ball fields. Would
we all be inducted if we didnt pass muster as Hellbenders?
Anyway, Darius kept flipping the charts, and the grandfather
clock in the foyer kept bonging out the quarter hours.
Finally, blueprints of every floor of McKissic House.
Okay, Mister JayMac said. Whos rooming with
whom?
The boardinghouse had two rooms for ballplayer-lodgers
on the first floor, four on the second story, and a sort of garret
nook on the third. Us rookiesd settle in faster, the theory
went, if we each had an old hand for a roommate.
Sir, dont we need to see whos gonna get cut before we
start assigning roommates? Sweet Gus Pettus said.
Mister JayMac studied Pettus sorrowfully, his head
cocked. To be fair, yes. But I already know who I thinkll be
gone by tomorrow noon. You, Mr Pettus. Also, Charlie Jorgensen,
Rick Roper, and Bobby Collum. Mr Collum rents
from me over in Cotton Creek, but all four of yall should be
thinking about finding other work and moving out.
What? Rick Roper cried. What? Spot challenges tomorrow
and youre not even waiting to see how we do?
Mr Roper, youve played seventeen innings at shortstop
this year, Mister JayMac said, but you have three times as
many errors as Mr Hoey, whos played over a hundred. Youve
fanned every time youve come up to bat.
Roper shut up. You could tell Pettus, Jorgensen, and
Collum because they sat like glum statues. Roper went into a
pathetic hangdog hunker of his own.
For room-assignment purposes, Mister JayMac said,
Im going to assume that tomorrow at this time the four men
whose surnames Ive called will no longer be around. If any of
yall want a head start on a new life, Ill give you your pay and a
small severance check. Im no heartless monster, gentlemen.
No he aint, Hoey said. Ask Jumbo. The boss loant
him his car.
Mister JayMac looked at Jumbo. And you, Mr Clerval,
why did I have to send Euclid to fetch you?
Sir, I fell asleep. My errand earlier today fatigued me.
What errand was that? Hoey asked Jumbo.
A personal errand. A private matter.
He got his ashes hauled! somebody shouted.
If he did, Hoey said, it took a dump truck to do it.
Hush, Mister JayMac said. Nobody did. Knock it off!
We have room assignments to make and swapping out to do.
Heggie, Dobbs, and Ankers got picked for roomies right
away, by Knowles, Curriden, and Musselwhite, and the guys
identified as culls were thrown out on their ears. No one,
though, jumped to take me.
Dumbo with Jumbo, Buck Hoey said. A perfect
match.
Dumbo. The nickname the smart-alecks back in Tenkiller
had hung on me. Hoey was just like the jerk back home whod
offered to buy me a ticket to Dumbo because, S a good idea to
stay in touch with your fambly, kid.
Jumbo studied me with his custardy eyes. Okay, he
said. I agree to take Mr Boles into my roost.
Jumbos apartment was the only third-floor room set
aside for boarders. If you could trust Mister JayMacs wall
chart, roost was a great name for it. Every guy at the meeting
looked back and forth between Jumbo and me. Cripes. He was
the kind of joker you have bad dreams about, and Mister
JayMac was going to let him take me upstairs to his . . . roost.
Id left my duffel and my bat in the
kitchen. When I went to get them, Curriden and Parris, on KP
that week, followed me in and said I should start scrubbing
dishes. I glared. Pro ballplayers, scrubbing dishes? Why
couldnt Kizzy do them? Getting thrown into Jumbo Clervals
dutches had soured my mood, but I still couldnt see why
Mister JayMacd pay a skinny old female shine just to cook
and slouch around. Hadnt he also hired her as a housekeeper?
Why have colored help if your paid white ballplayers had to
pitch in to help the help?
Kizzy read my mind. Danl Bowes, I cooks and cooks.
Aint nobody in this house goes hongry. You hongry?
Nowhere like. If Id taken another crumb, Idve burst like
a ripened pimple. I shook my head.
Then you best git it in yo head to hep. Else Im gone,
off to do fo folks whatll preciate it. She poked me with a
finger like a voodoo bone. Hear what I say, Danl Bowes?
This time I nodded. I heard her.
Parris said, You run off Kizzy, Boles, you might as well
be dead. Word gets round you chased her, you will be dead.
I loves to cook, Kizzy said, but hates to mess wi the
pots and pans, the spills and overbiles that come wi a fixin
bringe. When Mister JayMac stole me from Mrs Lullworths
in thuddy-eight, he say I dont have to mess wi aw that truck
again. So I wont, Danl Bowes, I gots me options.
You go on now, Curriden told her. Quip and me and
this rude boy herell finish up.
Kizzy rinsedrinched, she saidher hands off, gathered
her stuff up, and limped to the porch door off the
kitchen. She sported a flappers hat from the roaring twenties
and a picnic basket-size handbag. She looked back at us. Mo
pie in the Frigidaire. Yall gits hongry, go to it. And she left in
a slicked-up Model T, its gas coupons courtesy of Mister
JayMac.
Too damned uppity for her own good, all right, Curriden
said when shed gone. But whos going to tell her?
Parris got Junior Heggie to come down to help me scrub
pots and towel-dry plates. The sink had been installed for a
person no more than five feet tall. I could see why Curriden
had wanted to hand the dishwashing chores on to a rookie. It
killed me to stoop over that basin, and Curriden had a good
half foot on me.
By the time Heggie and I finished, the team meeting had
long since broken up. The guys who lived in Cotton CreekHoey,
Nutter, Sloan, and four othershad ridden back to the
old mill district in Mister JayMacs Caddy. Hed chauffeured
them himself, eight men packed like sardines into his two-seater,
with Hoey, according to one report, perched on Norm
Sudikoff s lap like Charlie McCarthy on Edgar Bergens.
See there, Parris told me when wed heard this story,
Hoeys a dummy too.
Jumbo waited in the parlor. Three of Mister JayMacs
culls sat with him looking glum and confused. (A fourth, Bob
Collum, had returned to Cotton Creek with Hoey and pals,
probably to tell his wife some dicey times lay ahead.) When I
came in, the culls looked up at me like I was their hangman.
This way to our room, Jumbo said. He ducked into the
foyer and lumbered for the stairs. I wanted to follow him about
as much as I wanted rheumatic fever.
One fella got up from the card table hed been sitting at
and stopped me: Roper, a rangy player with eyes like tenpenny
nailheads and a foul cigarette stink on his breath. Just then,
though, I couldnt put a name to his face. (One convenient
thing about being a dummyyou can forget other folks
names without them realizing it.)
Roper dropped a long arm over my shoulder. If youre
any good atall, Boles, he said, talking into my ear, Im history.
Spot challenges tomorrow, but Mister Jesus JayMacs
already throwed me out. I roomed with Muscles, but hes already
showing that Ankers kid my half of the premises. Is that
fair?
I couldnt shake my head. Ropers handd clamped the
back of my neckit felt like a claw.
Were subs, scrubs, third-stringers, he said, yanking my
head around, to look at Pettus and Jorgensen. Expendables.
You and them other wet-eared recruits have done for us. So I
hope yallre worth it, us getting booted. He finally let go.
Pettus and Jorgensen eyed me from the card table. Even
before being dropped from the club, theyd been semievicted
from their rooms.
Where would Pettus and Jorgensen sleep? On sofas? In
musty old chairs? I felt sorry for them. They looked
sledgehammered, like heifers about to crash. I didnt feel that
sorry for Roper. He wanted to blame me for the whole room-and-roster
shuffle, but I felt no guiltI hadnt bombed Pearl
Harbor either.
The real culprit was the war itself. CVL teams made do
in 43 with twenty-man rosters; marginal guys over that number
had to face the blade. In most CVL towns, a twenty-man
roster gave management a payroll that didnt chew up the
seasons gate. It also squared pretty well with the manpower
needs of the Selective Service Acts and each clubs search for
usable talent.
Dick Ropers my name, Roper said. I may have to
leave this bunch of shitasses, but yallll hear from me again.
(Actually, we did. He got drafted later that summerone
of the reasons Mister JayMac released him, I imagine, and
fought in Europe with the Ninth Army. Today hes a U. S.
Congressman from a district in western Georgia, a born-again
shill for the national gun lobby.)
Jumbo came back from the foyer to get me. Roper retreated
to the card table and his cast-off buddies. If Jumbo felt
sorry for them, he didnt show it. He took my bagin his
hand, it resembled a sack of marblesand made for the stairs
again. Following him, I knew he reared up to seven feet, maybe
seven-two. In Tenkiller, Id never seen anybody even close to
that size. Six foot took the cake. In fact, Lon Musselwhite was
the biggest man Id ever seen until Jumbo came along, and I
hadnt seen Muscles until just that morning.
Anyway, I had my doubts about soldiering up the stairs
behind Jumbo. It reminded me of beanstalk climbing. Fee-fi-fo-fum.
The steps creaked. Once wed reached the second floor
and the steps to the third, the housewith its mildewed
wainscoting, wavy picture molding, and uneven hardwood floorshad
started to seem as echoey and crooked as a fairy-tale castle.
We finally hit the third floor. A T-shaped hall divided it.
We went down the crossbar to the houses southwest side.
Jumbo keyed open his door and nodded me in. Not counting
the kitchen, this was the hottest room in McKissic House Id
yet visited, the stiflingest by far. Jumbo didnt say two words,
just pointed me to the corner under a gable roof. He dragged
over a canvas cot for me to stow my gear under and to sleep on:
an Army cot, bought or liberated from Camp Penticuff. Jumbo
broke it open and set it up for me.
No need for blankets, but Idve looked with favor on a
pillow and a sheet. I didnt relish undressing in front of Jumbo,
but because I usually slept in my skivvies, a showdown would
eventually comeunless I copped out and slept in my clothes.
The heat nixed that notion. My first bad dream, even one of
Aleutian snows and icy Marsden matting, would trigger a killing
fever attack. But I couldnt tell Jumbo how I felt, what I
wanted, why I ached to cry, and he didnt ask. At least my
smelly cot sat next to a window and an outside fire escape. But
Jumbod probably let me camp there because he was too tall to
move easily under the gables ceiling.
Jumbo had a bed with white iron bedposts, two sets of
springs laid side by side, and a couple of rectangles of scrap
plywood on the springs. The setup didnt look comfy, granted,
but it had my cot beat all the way to the nearest mattress
factory. Well, okay. Jumbo had let me into his room. He was
the landlord, I was the tenant. But why couldnt I have a bed
too? After all, McKissic House didnt shelter convicts or street
bums.
Youll adjust, Jumbo said. After a time, the heat becomes
bearable.
Wham! it hit me: my rookie status, the attic room, the
hideous galoot I had to live with. I broke down and sobbed,
like I had on the train. Anywhere else, with anybody else, Idve
tried to hide how trampled on and scared I felt. Jumbo,
though, I let watch.
Then I reached under my cot, pulled my Red Stix bat out
of my bag, and stood there glaring and wringing the bats
handle. I didnt plan to clobber Jumbohedve clobbered me
back, I thoughtjust to squeeze out some sawdust to catch
my tears in.
Jumbo had a dust-clogged revolving fan with a metal
safety basket. It rested on a pitcher stand between his bed and
my cot. He turned the fan toward me and switched it on. It
buck-danced around, moving muggy air. If hed hoped the fan
would improve my mood, it didnt.
I continued to cry.
In his frock coat and patched trousers, like a hulking Abe
Lincoln in a Mathew Brady photograph, Jumbo sat down on
his bed. He didnt seem to be sweating, just steaming comfortably
from the inside. He gave off a clayey smell, a smell with a
soothing edge to it but also a buzzing persimmonish feel; not a
sick-making smell, but a different one.
Crying, I noticed Jumbod done a few things to make his
attic homey. Semihomey. Shelves lined the wall behind his bed,
pine planks hed made into a bookcase with the aid of several
large cans of Joan of Arc red kidney beans. Hed used these
cans the way folks today use cinderblocks, as braces between
the shelves. Hed stacked them eight cans high, in three columns,
two cans per column between each shelf.
Books glutted the shelves. Over them he had this William
Blake reproduction of Adam and Eve being kicked out of Eden
by angels with fiery swords. It looked like Jumbo had cut the
picture out of a magazineLife?and glued it to a piece of
cardboard with a mat of green construction paper but no glass.
Then hed hooked it on a loop of wire to a nail in the wall.
Anyway, the books, the fan, and the magazine picture
didnt do much to hide the fact he lived in a grungy third-story
oven. Now I lived in it with him.
In the old days, English noblemen with crazy wives or
daughters stashed their women in attics like this one and hid
the keys in old ships trunks.
Say something, I thought. Say something, you lummox.
But he didnt. He didnt even shed his stupid coat. He sat
there, sorry or maybe embarrassed for me, miffed at himself
for agreeing to take me in. I slammed past his bed into the hall,
Jumbo didnt try to stop me. Either he didnt care to risk my
anger or my leaving didnt exactly crush him.
I stumbled down the stairs. On the second floor, some
players, including Heggie and Dobbs, stood around in the hall,
the doors to their bedrooms open. I startled them. Sure I dida
nutso-looking kid with a bat trying to find something to
break.
Double Dunnagin flapped out of his room in shower
thongs and a bathrobe. He copped in a wink how I was primed
to let go of my wayward, ornery pain.
Hey there, Danny. Swell bat.
Get him off the hall with that thing! Mariani yelled.
The twerps gone round it.
Dunnagin came over. He asked to see the bat. I pulled it
back, cocking it. Everybody else on the hallMariani, Parris,
Heggie, Dobbs, Knowles, Curridenhad shut up. Dunnagin
kept smiling, kept coming on. He said he understood how
arriving in Highbridge on a steamy day and getting paired off
with Jumbo could tetch a fella. He took my elbow, even
though I couldve knocked his head off with one swing, and
steered me into his room. His roomy, a pitcher name of Jerry
Wayne Sosebee, bridled to see me.
For Gods sake, Double, he said, dont bring the
crazy kid in here. Im trying to balance my checkbook.
But Dunnagin, without even wrenching my bat away, had
already closed the door. Sosebee stood up. He wore nothing
but a pair of khaki boxer shorts and eyed me like Id brought
cholera. His side of the rooma room twice as big as Jumbos
hotboxboasted photos of family members, pets, a Ford sedan
on blocks. Hed papered the wall next to his bed with
Varga girl pinups from Esquire. Even half unglued, I ogled them.
The guys whackers, Sosebee said.
Seems healthy enough to me, Dunnagin said.
Get him out. Jesus H. Christ.
Dunnagin shuffled on a pair of trousers and a T-shirt,
flipped Sosebee a salute, and led me down the stairs and out of
the house.
Tiptoeing through the rows of a victory garden, he pulled
me along by the barrel of my bat. We crossed a stretch of lawn
below the garden and Mister JayMacs bungalow and ended up
in a gazebo near a good-size pond.
In Tenkiller, the Elshtains had a gazebo. In his carpentry
days, my dadd built a few for townies with big yards and a
need to show their money. Down South, gazebos sprout like
toadstools. I dont know why. They make little sensemoronic
structures with roofs but no walls, more for show than
everyday use. But Dunnagin pulled me up the steps of this one
and made me put my keister on a bench inside it. I held my bat
between my knees, where it jutted up like a bodacious hard-on.
Dunnagin laughed. I set it down and rolled it under my bench
with my foot.
Thanks, Dunnagin said. He began to pace. It wasnt
quite dark yet. Only a couple of stars twinkled. You could
smell these typical Hothlepoya County smells drifting in from
town or from the countryside and colliding with each other.
One smell was of plowed earth, like rotting burlap. Heavier,
though, was the sweet, starchy fragrance from the Goober Pride
peanut butter factory. Back then, these stinks haunted Highbridge,
especially the trackside factory districts. In residential
neighborhoods where Dutch elms, maples, and oaks could filter
some of the peanutty stench out of the dead air, it dropped
to tolerable levels. Nowadays, I cant catch a whiff of it without
thinking first of gazebos and second of Highbridge.
Dont panic, Danny, Dunnagin said, pacing barefoot in
front of me. He had his hands in his back pants pockets.
Plenty of room therehe hardly had any fanny at all. Jumbo
hasnt killed anybody yet. He looks like death blown up to
dirigible size and painted battleship gray, but, I mean, hey, hes
human, isnt he?
Was he? I didnt know.
He doesnt have a social knack as well developed as his
vocabulary, I admit it, but that shouldnt shake youyoure
not exactly a social lion yourself, I wouldnt think, and even
Harpo has a bigger vocabulary than you do. He squeezed the
bulb of an imaginary airhorn: Beep, beep.
Look, Dunnagin went on, you should feel flattered he
took you. Clerval had the only private room in McKissic
House. Dunnagin stopped pacing. I had my eyes on his feet.
He didnt start talking again until I raised my sights to his face.
Mister JayMac assigned that attic room to Clerval last year,
his first on the club, and Idve figured him about as ready to
take on a roomy as Hitler to show up at a kosher gig in Miami.
So you should feel honored. Chosen, even.
My eyes grew hubcap round. I did feel chosen, I just
didnt know for what.
Yeah, hes big. Six-ten, seven, maybe seven-two. Hard to
say. He sort of slouches. Taller than Howie Schultz, though.
Schultz, the kid who plays first for Brooklyn. Sportswriters call
him The Steeple. Got nixed for military service for being too
tall. S one reason Mister JayMac hurried to sign Clervalthe
Army wouldnt come calling. A better reason is, Clervals a
good country player. A bit slow, not a lot of range, but a
champ at digging out bad throws and snagging tosses thatd
sail slap over anybody elses head. Hes also good at catching
darters right back at him and shots down the foul line that
might drop in for extra-base hits.
I pulled my bat out from under the bench. I rolled its
handle back and forth between my palms.
Yeah, he can hit. Sort of. Last year his batting average
hovered around .220 or sopoor for the minors, fatal for a
guy with big-league ambitions. But hes got a scary knack for
making the hits he does get count. Hes slammed fence busters
in spots thatdve killed us if he hadnt come through. Killed us.
So Mister JayMac gave him his own room. Hes valuable even
if he isnt quite bigs material.
Dunnagin took my bat and sighted along it at the evening
star. Then he swung it a few times. Me, I swatted mosquitoes,
a swarm from the shallows of Hellbender Pond.
Here. Dunnagin handed the bat back to me. Cigarette?
He shook a couple out of his pack, stuck one in my
mouth, and lit me up. Sometimes the smokell run the bastards
off. He meant the mosquitoes. Soothe your nerves
too.
I took an awkward puff. Back in Tenkiller, Coach Brandon
had hated the habit. Called cigarettes wind-robbers. Sharing
one with Dunnagin felt a lot like breaking training.
Old Golds, Dunnagin said. They got this apple honey
stuff in em to keep their tobacco moist.
I couldnt taste any apple honey, but I kept smoking. In
a minute or two, I had a coughing fit. Dunnagin didnt notice.
Around the loop, players started calling Clerval Jumbo.
He tolerates it. Just dont call him Goliath, Behemoth, or
Whale. He hates Whale. Call him that, its like youre knocking
not only him but all the whales in the seas. Jumbos okay,
though, because its fairly neutral. It just means hes big, which
hed be a blind fool to deny.
I kept coughing; a fuse sizzled straight down my tongue.
No idea how old Clerval is, Dunnagin said. Thirty?
Maybe thirty-five or -six. He sometimes limps around like a
crip. Other times, hes light on his feet as Astaire. Even
DiMaggiod die for Clervals swing on his good days. I sure
would.
With one hand I smoked. With the other I scratched a
mosquito bite on my shin. Blood stained my pants cuff, and
flesh rode under my fingernails.
Did you see him eating tonight? Dunnagin asked me.
Take a look at him and youd assume hes a meat-eating
barbarian. Nosir. Hes a vegetarian, a strict one. Wont touch
chicken or eggs. Eats a ton of produce a week, though. And
Goober Pride peanut butter. Practice mornings, game days, he
devours half a jar. Good thing hes near the source, eh?
Dunnagin rubbed his chin. Come on. Ill walk you back up.
Clerval wont bite. He only bites vegetables.
I let Dunnagin lead me back to the house and up the
stairs to Jumbos room. Dunnagin knocked.
Hank, is it okay if young Boles here comes back in?
The door swung open. Jumbo stood framed in it from
the chest down. He bent at the knees and peered at us sideways.
Come in, Mr Boles.
See you tomorrow, Dunnagin said. He did a swamis
farewell, touching his forehead and chin and rolling his hand
over. Then he beat it back down the stairs.
Jumbo had changed our room. A dividera loosely
woven grass mathung between his bed and my cot. Hed also
put a quilt and a feather pillow on my cot and set up his
revolving fan at the edge of the grass curtain so that it blew
into his half of the room through part of its arc and into my
half for the other. It moved hot air around, but also kept
mosquitoes from drilling us like Texas oil fields.
I intend to read a while. Tell me if the lamp disturbs
you. Jumbo ducked behind the mat, where his shadow hung,
scaring the Tenkiller crap out of me. I sat down on the quilt
hed rustled up and stared at his lumpy silhouette.
Dunnagins efforts to calm me didnt calm me now I was
back in Jumbos room. I heeled off my shoes thinking he was
about to rip down the mat, grab me by the earlobes, and dump
me out the window. Jumbo never did that, but sometimes his
head would seem to turn my way and stare at me through the
weave, his eyesI imaginedleaking a thin yellow lava.
I lay down in my clothes. Mama Laurel, the Elshtains,
Coach Brandon, Franklin Gooch, and everyone else in Tenkiller
might as wellve rocketed off to Mars. At last I slept. Later, I
awoke in darkness. The fan still bumped away, and Jumbo still
breathed over its whirr in deep, even gasps. Gasping myself, I
went under again. . . .
The next morning, I woke before Jumbo.
My mouth felt like itd been emery-boarded and stuffed with
cotton balls. (Dunnagins Old Golds?) The mosquito bites on
my ankles and finger joints looked like razor nicks, Id
scratched them so hard. I needed a bath.
I rummaged up a towel and skulked past the mat dividing
the room. In the early grayness, Jumbo lay atop his bed-clothes,
in extra-large BVDs, a human mountain rangeknees,
hips, rib cage, shoulders, head. He lay twisted in a way
youdve thought impossible for the human form to get into
without permanent damage, but his breathinggentle, gasping
snoressaid just the opposite. The ugly galootd really gone
under.
In sleep, though, Jumbos ugliness grew uglier. His body
parts didnt seem to fit. His stringy-haired block of a noggin
didnt belong with the bullish neck and the wide sloping
shoulders under it. His proportions were more or less okay, I
guess, but the colors and textures of his skin didnt match up
the way youdve expected. It was like someoned kneaded biscuit
dough, cake dough, and a mass of Piedmont clay together
without blending them. Even as he snored, Jumbo reminded
me of a body, wounded or dead.
In the bathroom, I got presentable. I didnt look in on
Jumbo again.
I snuck downstairs to the parlor. Pettus, Jorgensen, and
Roper had disappeared.
No oned removed the easel and its charts. On the easel I
saw a map of Penticuff Strip, with all the honky tonks, tattoo
dens, and horizontal refreshment stations Mister JayMac
had declared off-limits to us, saying hidebound morality didnt
lead him to discourage us from visiting these dives, only his
certainty no Hellbender with any sand could venture over
there without getting in a brawl.
Those Camp Penticuff boys see the Strip as their private
party turf, Mister JayMacd lectured. Way they see it,
any able-bodied male who shows up there in civvies is a pussy-stealing
shirker who needs his balls kicked. If you go, dont
expect me to foot your hospital bills or your hoosegow bail.
Ill cut you loose first. Ill tell your draft boards youre ready
for basic training and a quick-march slog into combat. Yall got
that?
Yessir! everybody said.
This morning, though, I thought it awfully dumb or
awfully thoughtful of him to leave in plain view a map of all
the barrel houses and sin cribs wed do so well to avoid. I
stood there in the bad light trying to memorize that map and
its prime attractions: The Hot Spot, Corporal Johns, The
Wing and Thigh, Effie McGees. Id worked from the Strip
entrance at Market Street to Pawnshop Row, about three quarters
along it, when a voice from the dining room whirled me
like a caught-out burglar.
Up so early, Kizzy said, you can hep me git my
breakfuss going, Mister Danl. She waved me toward her with
a hand made ghostly by biscuit flour, then banged back
through the kitchen door like Id follow her in on command.
Overnight, Id gone from Mr Bowes to Mister Danla step
down, I thought. And whyd she singled me out for KP this
morning? Hadnt I done my duty last night?
My gut told me to do what Kizzy askedI always did
what grownups said. But if Id stayed in my room like all the
other slugabeds, I wouldntve had to make a decision. Kizzy
was stiffing me for my Ben Franklin up-and-at-em ethic. Not
fair. So I turned again to Dariuss map of Penticuff Strip.
The kitchen door swung open. I didnt even look up.
With a finger, I traced the distance from GI Georges Camera
Shop to a dancehall called, I swear to God, the Jitterbuggery.
Mr Boles, a drawly female voice said, Kizzy just
asked for your help. Come at once. Please. The please
was a sop to the fact the speaker and I were both white. Confusion
held me a second, then I double-timed it. Just inside the
kitchens doorsboy, it smelled good in there!the white
woman whod spoken to me was flensing strips from a greasy
slab of bacon.
Seeing bacon startled me. Meat rationingd begun at the
end of March, and Mama and I had tried to support the war
effort by eating cold cereals. Goochie had called this gut
patriotism. He hated cereals for breakfast, meatless chili for
lunch, scrambled eggs for dinner twice a week. At McKissic
House, though, no one had to sacrifice much.
Grease these baking sheets, the white woman said.
Then halve and squeeze those oranges, please. The juicers
over there. At least a pitchers worth for starters. See if you
cant strain out those noxious little seeds. A seed in a glass of
orange juice is an irritant and a reproof.
This woman, at fifty-something, looked several years
older than my mama. She wore a floral-print dress, all blue and
violet, with a clean white apron over itlike a dairy maid or a
Swiss nun. Her hair shone whiter and softer than the slab of
pork under her hands, but a beautician had cut it like a girls,
swept it up high and drawn it back in wings over her ears, with
a cameo clasp at the base of her neck. She had pink lips, dark
eyebrows, and eyes like blue aggies. To me, she was . . . the
sunrise in an apron.
Dont get me wrong. I didnt develop an instant crush. I
just realized a female as striking as this intruder in Kizzys
kitchen was a bird of paradise. She belonged in a storm of
biscuit flour about like Vivien Leigh belonged on her knees
with a scrub brush in a public John. Just then I didnt know
much else about her. Maybe she secretly poisoned hummingbird
feeders. One thing for sureshe could boss you like a
topkick out to Camp Penticuff.
I started greasing baking sheets while Kizzy measured
fresh grounds into a coffee pot the size of a small oil drum.
The sun hadnt risen full yet, but the kitchen had already
begun to creak and steam. I felt like a galley slave.
Im Mrs McKissic, the white woman told me. Giselle
Crouch McKissic. You may call me, as everyone does, Miss
Giselle. She paused in her rapid-fire bacon slicing. Or could,
that is, if you could talk. So you may think of me as Miss
Giselle. However, you will probably settle on a private name in
tune with your own vulgar tastes and biases. I cant prevent
that, but it betrays your upbringing, Mr Boles.
Mister Danls a good boy, maam. Jes caint talk.
I know he cant talk, Miss Giselle said, but he can
think. Not well, necessarily, but freely, unimpeded by any human
concern for the feelings of his elders. Muteness affords an
awfully convenient armor against self-revelation. Perhaps we
should all aspire to it.
You thinking way too much, maam, Kizzy said.
Thisere boys awright.
A judgment based on only half a days experience?
Yessum. Thats aw I gots.
Miss Giselle said, Enough greasing, Mr Boles. Lard and
butter are rationed. Do you wish to run us out? Impossible, I
thought. This kitchen seemed to have reserves of everything
from tabasco sauce to oatmeal. To the juice, please. A herd
will soon be gathering.
I went to the juicer. It looked like a glass Ku Klux Klan
hat, with a moat around it. I halved oranges and mashed out juice. Kizzy
hummed radio melodiesPaper Doll and Pistol
Packin Mama, not corny spirituals or big-city blues. Miss
Giselle cracked eggs into a big mixing bowl and whipped them
into a froth with a long-handled spoon.
Darius came in from his room above the carriage house.
Kizzy, Miss Giselle, Mr Boles. He waited.
Yes, Miss Giselle said. You may roust them out.
Darius banged out of the kitchen and into the foyer.
Rise and shine! He climbed. Rise and shine, gentlemens.
You dont eat now, you dont eat till noon! Rise and shine! I
heard him pounding on doors. Rise and shine! He climbed
to the third floor. Dont eat now, you dont eat till noon!
Somebody yelled, Damn, man! Youre the loudest nigger
in the whole brought-low Confederacy!
It didnt phase Darius. Back on the second floor, he
shouted, Rise and shine! Reveille at McKissic House. I felt
smug about beating this wake-up call, even as I crippled my
throwing hand on a juicer spindle and missed my extra winks.
When youre through there, Mr Boles, Miss Giselle
said, get out the cereal and sweet milk for Mr Clerval. He
cant abide animal protein.
He is a picky fella, Kizzy said.
I admire that in him, Miss Giselle said. Its unusual to
find a cogent particularity in any human male.
Darius came back into the kitchen. He took a biscuit
from one of the baking sheets Kizzyd removed from the oven,
cut it open, and smeared it with strawberry jam.
Miss Giselle looked on with the sourest expression Id
yet seen on her porcelain-pretty face. Who said you could
have that?
Darius finished eating and licked his fingertips. Nobody,
maam. Ill be eating shortly. Hardly seems a crime to
grab a early taste.
Miss Giselle just looked at him.
Darius tightened his jaw. Sorry, maam. He stalked out
to the screened-in porch. At its door, he said, After breakfuss,
see me fo practice flannels, Danl. Tell them other new fellas
the same. He went on down the steps. The screen door
banged to like a mine going off.
At practice that morning, I backed up
Buck Hoey at shortstop. Heggie backed up Lamar Knowles at
second. Skinny Dobbs birddossed Trapdoor Evans in right
field. Philip Ankers, whod probably learned to pitch chunking
clods at cows, went down to the bullpen to warm up with our
second-string catcher, Nyland Turkey Sloan.
S only me youve got to get by, Dumbo, Hoey said as
we stood in the infield watching Mister JayMac hit fungoes to
the outfield. I gave Hoey a look. Ropers gone. Roper, Pettus,
Jorgensenthey all took Mister JayMacs offer of back pay,
railway tickets, and severance pay. So did Bob Collum. Mister
JayMacs savvy. He knows everybodys skills and limitations.
Yours too, Dumbo. So I hope hes right.
From right, Dobbs threw one in like a bazooka shot to
Dunnagin at home platea no-hopper, the kind of
dead-on-target throw you dont see twice all year.
S too soon to showboat, Mr Dobbs! Mister JayMac
yelled. You ruin that arm, Ill unsocket the other, jes to keep
em a matched set.
Yessir! Dobbs yelled back. Sorry, sir!
My wife and Collums wifere big pals, Hoey said.
Now the Collumsre leaving. Looks like Mister JayMac
mayve guessed right on Dobbs, though. Collum never threw
like that. What about you? Did he guess right on you? Or am I
gonna send you home with a dent in your cup and mud on
your face?
I pretended to watch the fielders catching and throwing
in. In fact, I did watch em, them and Mister JayMac.
In refusing to wear baseball duds, Mister JayMac set
himself apart from most other managers. He dressed like a
man off for a scrambled dog at the corner drug store, casual
but neat. Today, he wore beat-up spikes instead of street shoes.
The dirt around home was loose, and hitting fungoes from
there required purchase.
Seeing Mister JayMac at a flip chart, youdve figured him
for a manager whod ride the bench with a bourbon bottle in a
paper sack. But Id seen him throwing hard yesterday, and
today he was smacking the ball. Hed even step in front of his
catcher to pick off one-hop throws from the outfield. He liked
his players to put out. Exert! hed yell. Sweat! Dive! He
liked leaping grabs, all-out tumbles, flamethrower pegs to first
or home.
Even in his linen pants, dirt spilling from his cuffs, Mister
JayMac was something. Trying out for him, I busted my
tail. So did Junior at second and Dobbs in right. Not only did
we want to earn ourselves starting spots, we also wanted to
pleasereally pleaseMister JayMac.
At the three challenge spots, three rookies against three
old hands, we had us three battle royals. Mister JayMac tested
every pair of rivals, turn by turn. Hed say, Men on first and
third, one out, Boles and Heegie up, or, Bottom o the ninth,
tie score, runner on second, Hoey and Knowles up, toss the
ball up, feint one way, and fungo it another, with such a skitter
on it youd be lucky not to catch it in your teeth.
I had my championship year on the Red Stix going for
me. Even more important, I had a history of hundreds of
thousands of fielded ricochets from the wall of Tenkillers
icehouse. I dont think even Buck Hoey, a career minor leaguer,
had handled more chances than me. Eight or nine a game tops
it out for a shortstop, with a few hundred to a thousand more
chances in spring training. Hoey had talent and more experience
in actual game situations, but I had talent too and Id
practiced morea hundred years as an all-star vet of Ye Olde
Icehouse Loop. Off the field, I lacked confidence, but I had so
much sass on it, you couldve given half of mine to Stepin
Fetchit and made him swagger like Mussolini. Swear to God.
Today, back from whatever errand hed run yesterday,
Jumbo owned first base. His backup was Norm Sudikoff, a
married guy renting one of the bosss Cotton Creek mill
houses. Jumbo had Sudikoff behind him all day, but Mister
JayMac waved Sudikoff into action only every fourth or fifth
time he fungoed to the infield. Mostly, Sudikoff stood twenty
yards behind the bag, in foul territory, while Jumbo put on a
fielding clinic.
Standing or striding, Jumbo was a disjointed wreck. His
shoulders, elbows, knees, and head jutted weirdly. Slouching
from here to there, he looked a step away from unhinging and
falling apart. His physique and his hitch-along gait gave him a
brittle, palsied look.
On the field, though, Jumbo sparkled. He played a deep
first base, on the edge of the outfield grass. (Not even Howie
Gooch, whod had better range than any other high school
player Id ever seen, had played so deep.) This gave Jumbo
extra time to catch hard-hit shots to either side, even if the
pitcher sometimes had to cover the bag for the putout.
Vito MarianiSpeedy himselffielded the pitchers
spot. Each time Mister JayMac sent a runner to first after
rapping out an alley-seeking fungo to Jumbo, Jumbo and Manani
would team to nip the runner by a step or two. Red dust
would geyser up. My heart would stagger at the sheer loveliness
of their execution and the thrill of the race to the bag.
But Jumbo didnt always toss to Mariani. Sometimes hed
short-hop the ball, wave Mariani off, and pelt across the bag,
all windmilling elbows and knees, before the runnerd even
come out of the blocks. He had the headlong out-of-control
velocity of a runaway locomotive. Scary.
He cant walk, Hoey told me after one of these plays, but
he sure can jump and run. Jumbo also had a never-miss
lobster pincer in his glove and an arm like a catapult. Once,
after Mister JayMac had put an invented runner on third with
less than two outs, Jumbod almost knocked Dunnagin silly
with a blistering throw home.
In the challenges at second and short, Jumbo played no
favorites. Hed rumble to the bag, shift instinctively for the
throw, and pick it out of the air or scoop it up from the dirt,
to hell whether you were vet or rookie. His acrobatics at first
made every player throwing to him look like an all-star. Not
much got by him.
Sudikoff, by comparison, was a graceful second-rater. He had style around
the bag and an easy way of carrying himself, but hed screw up. Throws
in the dirt were his comeuppancehe couldnt come up with them. On
some chances, hed look like a matador doing a cape twirl, nifty and
elegant as you please, but the balld scoot past him and roll to the
seats. Sudikoff put on an act, Jumbo a bona fide show.
At second, Junior Heggie et Lamar Knowless lunch. The
kid from Valdosta backhanded screamers up the middle,
twisted like a gill-hung bass, and threw back over his shoulder
without a spike in the ground to push off of or anything but
desire on the ball to get it to first. He et Knowless lunch.
I did okay, but I didnt eat Hoeys lunch. My steadiness
had him hassled, though. Mister JayMacd gone out to Oklahoma
to recruit a new shortstop, so Hoey saw himself on his
knees under a guillotine blade. If I made a play, he had to. If I
knocked a darter out of the air, pounced on it, and got back on
my feet to nip the runner, he had to match my heroics. Mostly,
he did. But the heatfrom the sun, from Mister JayMacmade
him snippish and petty. He tried to rag me into misplays.
He asked me how far I reckoned beginners luck would
carry a dumb-fart Okie in the CVL. It irked him I couldnt
answer. Hedve enjoyed an insult-slinging free-for-all.
Youre a showboat, Dumbo. Id tell Mister JayMac to
stick one in your ear, but thatd be too easy.
Hoey was scared. About Dunnagins age, hed never spent
six minutes, much less six seasons, in the bigs. With time out
between 36 and 40 peddling Ohio real estate, his whole career
had played out in the minors: the Carolina League, the Southern
Association, the Appalachian League, the Sally League. A
wife and four pre-Pearl Harbor rug ratsd kept him out of the
Army, but a smidgen less talent than he needed, or bad luck,
had kept him out of the bigs. The worry in Hoeys good-looking
mug came through loud and clear. I wanted to outplay
the jerk, but I didnt want to unemploy him. How would he
tell Mrs Hoey? How would he feed his rug rats?
Yall get in here! shouted Mister JayMac, red-faced and
sweaty. Hed soaked his shirt out. His T-shirt showed through
like a filmy corset. His trousers were sopped, from waist to
thigh, like hed sat down in a wash tub. We circled him on the
infield grass, amazed by his energy, just like he wanted us to be.
You had to hand it to him, though. He didnt huddle in the
dugout with a jar of white lightning and a hand-held Jesus fan
from Stiffslinger & Sons Christian Mortuary.
Howd we do? Reese Curriden said. Curridend played
third, with relief from Burt Fanning, and hed done fine. You
just had to hope he didnt go down with a sprung hamstring. A
pitcher or a utilityman would have to replace him, and no sub
could do it. The Hellbenders werent exactly the Georgia Light
and Power Company. Like most other CVL clubs, we had a
shortage of utilitymen.
Better than yesterday, Mister JayMac said. Yall seem
tove remembered what thishe held up a dirty
baseballis for, after all. Praise Saint Doubleday.
Screw Saint Doubleday, Buck Hoey said. Whos starting
where the next time we play for keeps?
Whoa, Mister JayMac said. I got to see how my rookies
measure up in the hitting department.
Look at our box scores, Hoey said. Check our averages.
Knowles and me didnt fall off a milk wagon three hours
ago. Its too damned hot for this chickenshit.
So they say out to Camp Penticuff too, Mister JayMac
said. Except it isnt, not for Army recruits. Mens lives
hang in the balance. Likewise this teams.
I meant my chickenshit remark respectfully, sir.
Everybody laughed.
A queer bit of English on it then, Mister JayMac said.
Should Trapdoor, Lamar, and I start pounding the
pavement for defense jobs and new housing? Hoey said.
No one here todays in danger of the ax. Only my next
lineups in doubt. Well play an exhibition so I can decide.
Now? Peter Hay said.
The other ballplayers called Hay Haystack. He had yellow
hair and waddled like a haywagon. Mister JayMac always
had him running, but he could pitch and that kept him on the
squad. As soon as he said, Now? a half dozen Hellbenders
linked arms and spieled:
Huge Peter Haystack,
Please move your hulk.
Your gut goes by flat car,
Your butt goes by bulk.
Hay just grinned and pounded a fist on Turkey Sloans
head, mashing his cap in.
Sloand started the chant. Hed got half the team to join
in by waving his arms like a chorus leader. Mister JayMac let it
happen, seeing it as a tension-breaker.
Turkey Sloan backed Double Dunnagin at catcher and
handled most bullpen chores. Turkey didnt mean, back then,
what it does nowa brainless jerk, like a turkey that lifts its
head to watch it rain and ends up drowning. Sloand got his
nickname because he caught, and ballplayers at the turn of the
century, thinking home plate looked like a serving plate at
Thanksgiving, started calling it the turkey.
Anyway, Sloan had a catchers body buildbig shoulders,
big thighs, and a teddy bears friendly mug. He also had
brains. Hed written the Huge Peter Haystack rhyme, among
others, and the team saw him as its unofficial poet laureate. A
weakness for Mother Goose doggerel and a lot of time on his
hands had helped him claim the title.
I glanced around.
The only other guy not laughing was Jumbo. He squinted
at us like a scowling Jehovah. You figured hed been born
during a Puritan sermon with a dirge as background. You figured if he
ever told a joke, itd start with Inasmuch as or
something else lawyerly.
No, Mr Hay, not now, Mister JayMac said when everybodyd
quieted down. Inhe checked his watchforty
minutes. Take a break.
Players cheered, like kids let out for recess.
Hoey said, Hey. Whos gonna be playing who? The
regulars versus the rubes?
With that breakdown, Mister JayMac said, some of
yalld have to play yourselves.
All right, then. Whos pitching for who?
Mister JayMac held us there on hooks. He didnt want to
tip his hand yet.
Fess up, Mister JayMac, Parris said. Whats forty
minutes gonna mean? Announce your pitchers.
Tell us! a whole slew of players cried.
Mister JayMac made calming motions. Easy. Dont herniate
yourselves. The rookies and their pals will play behind
Ankers! Hoey said.
Astute deduction. Mister JayMac smiled like a kindly
grandpa with a bandolier full of machine-gun ammo.
And who for us? Hoey said. Who for us?
I wanted to know too. Which pitcher, after our break,
would I have to step in against? Quip Parris? Nutter, the ex-big
leaguer? Mariani? Or Dunnagins roomy, Jerry Wayne Sosebee?
They all looked tough, even the Eye-talian, a 4-F
punctured-eardrum.
But Mister JayMac said, Darius Satterfield.
Youre kidding, Hoey said gleefully.
Darius Satterfield, Mister JayMac repeated.
Hoey shadow-boxed a tornado of noseeums. Hot dog!
Sudikoff, doomed to play with rookies, cried, Jesus, why
you wanna throw that speedballin nigger at these new boys?
At you, you mean. Even with his spikes in red Georgia
clay, Hoey walked on a bed of cumuli, giddy as hell.
Showily, Mister JayMac checked his watch. Yallre down
to thirty-six minutes. Be back at ten-fifteen. Nickel-a-mmute
fine for latecomers.
Dont sound so fine to me, Quip Parris said.
Beat it! Mister JayMac said.
Most Hellbenders stumpled to the clubhouse to
shoot a jet from the water cooler up their noses or to
lie down on the concrete. Muscles, Curriden, and Charlie
Snow, gluttons for punishment, played a game of pepper in
some outfield shade.
A small crewincluding Junior and Mariani, Juniors
new roomycrossed a tree-lined street to a row of pretty
shops. Junior was a rookie too, so I followed these guys. Oaks,
elms, and sycamores strained a kind of surf music through
their leaves. Behind the shops, you could see folksy neighborhood
stuff: tool sheds, a dog house, an automobile up on
blocks, a loaded clothes line, lots of victory-garden plots. One
garden had a fort of bamboo staves and a web of strings for
pole beans to vine around and tomato plants to lean against.
The street seemed human, a harbor in Highbridges angry
summer dazzle.
One store in the row was a ma-and-pa grocery. Over its
door, a metal sign with glossy red letters as tall as shovel blades
said HITCH & SHIRLEENS NEIGHBORLY MARKET.
Two Coca-Cola ads flanked this sign, and paper scrolls in the
windows advertised Fancy Pink Salmon, Dixie Crystals Pure
Cane Sugar, and Campbells Vegetable Soup, for cash plus
ration points. Even after the other Hellbendersd gone inside, I
stood on the curb. How would I ask for what I wanted? If I
pointed, Id look like a moron or a stuck-up creep.
But, hey, I didnt have two cents on me. Baseball togs
dont have change pockets, per se, and Id left McKissic House
outfitted for ball, not a market trip. Four guys came out with
Cokes and Twinkies and sat on the curb in shifting patches of
shade. Sheepishly, I spiked past them and went inside. Dobbs
toasted me with his bottle.
Junior stood next to a gingerbreaded-up cash register
flirting with the clerk. My eyes had to adjust. When they did, I
looked around. Six double shelves ran front to back. A soft-drink
cooler with ice water in the bottom and metal stalls for
the bottles stood opposite the cash register. Two creaky overhead
fans turned. The store had a pressed-tin ceiling with
design squiggles in the stamped-out squares. The smells of
damp sawdust and wrapped cold cuts hung in the air. At last, I
could see to read a homemade sign nailed to a shelf near the
cash register:
Every Hellbender player who lodged at McKissic House
had given his ration book (War Ration Book Two) to Kizzy,
through Mister JayMac, so she could shop for the whole
house. Only team members with their own places got to keep
their books. So if you wanted a snack, you couldnt buy rationed
items. You had to get junk foodsoda, cupcakes, and
such, from companies thatd already justified their sugar
allotmentsand you bought it with coin, not coins and stamps.
But I had no coin, and it looked like all Id be able to do was
shuffle and covet.
Danny! Junior Heggie called. Danny, git yore tail over
here and meet this spitfire pixie!
I angled back to the cash register. The clerk behind it was
a girl with a foxs face, reddish-blond hair, and a costume-jewelry
cluster, a kind of exploded pearl, on one ear. She wore a
khaki shirt with a single set of captains bars on one collar and
a pair of rolled-up blue jeans. She didnt reach five feet. She
looked twelve, but the earring and her hipshot stance told you
twelve underestimated it. Well, maybe the earring didnt. Girls
will do a lot as preteens to make themselves look older, but
wearing Papas shirt isnt usually one of them, so you knew this
pixie had a grudge on, a war orphans crow to pick. Her daddy
was overseas, and dont you forget it, buster.
Whos this? she said. Ichabod Crane in a baseball
suit?
He dont talk, Junior said. Names Danny Boles. Hes
from Oklahoma, Plays a whangdoodgle shortstop.
Whynt you talk, Okie? Explain yoresef.
The sunburn from our workout probably hid my blush.
Junior got mad. You half-wit! I said he dont talk, and
he dont. Its an affliction. Leave him be.
Folks come in here to buy junk, not to sashay about
going, Mmmm, she said, mocking an uppity window shopper.
You deaf? Heggie said. He caint talk. I done told you.
Take your Twinkie, son, and put it where your mama
wont ever find it. A genteel little piece, passing out Suthren
hospitality.
Junior like to gagged. We had our speechlessness in common.
What a man, the girl said. Absodamnlutely flusterated
if a female dont drop down P.D.Q. to kiss his shoe. She
looked at me. Her next words werent so smart-alecky. Like a
person who caint talk, caint talk. Like yore no different from
a box of laundry soap.
I didnt say he wasnt no different from a box of laundry
soap, Junior said. I uz jes trying to
For sweet pitys sake, the girl cried, will you have the
decency to hush? Yore a disgrace to yore sexa ballplayers
commonest failing.
Creighton Nutter came back into the store. He grabbed a
pack of cigarettes, the last pack of Regents, and paid the girl
from a coin pouch looped through his belt. Junior muttered
somethingbitch, I thinkand brushed past Nutter onto the
sidewalk, as flusterated as the girld accused.
Ah, youre being neighborly again here at your Neighborly
Market, Nutter said. Swell.
Mister Creighton, take a leap, she said.
She cant stand ballplayers, Nutter told me. Or thinks
she cant. In her view, we should all be in the Army.
Not you, she said. Yore too old. Youd git ten jokers
round you and blow em all up by accydent.
Miss Pharram, Nutter said, allow me to present to
you Danny Boles. Mr Boles, the fair Miss Phoebe Pharram.
You think I want to know this skinny pill? Phoebe said.
Calm down, Nutter said. He yanked the pull on his
Regents, tapped out a cigarette, and lit up. Smoke whirled away
in the downdraft from an overhead fan. Phoebe here is Mister
JayMacs great niece, daughter of his late brother Judes child,
LaRaina. Hitch and Shirleen are her paternal grandparents,
and by a special arrangement with the team, their Neighborly
Market allows us Hellbenders to buy on credit. Get what you
want and Phoebe will record your purchases in a ledger set
aside for us. He took a deep drag on his cigarette, blew the
smoke at Phoebe, and elbowed out, letting the screen slam like
the neck-snapper on a mouse trap.
I hate the name Phoebe! Phoebe yelled after him. I pee
on it! Somebody on the sidewalk giggled. I hate all first and
last names what start with the same letters!
I stood there awed, drinking her in.
Call me Skeeter, she told me. I hate the name Phoebe,
and I shore as Shirleen dont answer to bitch.
Of course, I would think of her then and always as
Phoebe. Skeeter cut this feisty little girl down to something you
went to a lot of trouble to swat. Besides, back then, girls who
talked like Phoebe were about as plentiful as cow bells in an
Episcopal choir.
Cripes, Ichabod. My admiration chapped her. Bring
me somepin to write up in this ledger. Or clear out.
I hustled to get an orange soda from the cooler and a
Baby Ruth from the candy aisle. I brought them over to
Phoebe, who turned to take inventory of the cough-drop boxes,
poker chips, and clip combs on the shelf behind her. I rolled
the bottom of my soda bottle on the glass countertop.
Yeh? she said, not looking around.
I waited. Phoebe ignored me. I fidgeted. It might be
nearly time for our practice to resume. I used my soda bottle
like a bell clapper, ringing it against the fancy metal register.
She spun around. Her eyes, a marbly grayish green, jumped like
hard-thrown jewels.
Watch it, Ichabod. She came to the counter, grabbed
my drink and candy bar, pulled a book out from under the
counter, and wrote down all the needed infoeverything but
my name. Shed heard my name twice, butd already forgotten
it. She saw me looking, waiting for her to finish up.
Okay, she said. What gives here, Ichabod?
I pounded my fist on the countertop. Phoebe blinked.
Her face turned fish-belly pale, then her eyes flared again. Even
an Army .45 wouldntve scared her for long. It embarrassed
her not to remember my name, though, and I couldnt tell her
because . . . well. Mexican standoff.
I charged around the counter, yanked the Big Red
Parker Duofold pen from her, and bent over the ledger to
scribble my own name in. The Duofold was a clumsy near-antique,
and I wrote my John Hancock just like Hancock, gig:
DANIEL HELVIG BOLES. Then I went back out front,
grabbed a pack of Camels, and had Phoebe add them to my
tab. Rustled some matchbooks from a box, took my soda
bottle by the neck, scooped up my Baby Ruth, and headed out
the door afraid I might drop something and wind up looking a
cluck.
Hey, wait a sec. I stopped and looked back at Phoebe.
Sorry I called you Ichabod. Nobody likes a name dropped on
em like a peed-on blanket.
She had that right. I banged outside and sat down on the
curb next to Nutter, now puffing away like a factory.
Camels, Nutter said, seeing my pack. They dont tire
my taste. Theyre easy on my throat. They suit me to a
T. If we smoked sandpaper dust, their adsd say the same
thing.
I drank my orange soda, I ate my candy bar, I smoked a
Camel. I thought I heard an adultHitch? Shirleen?talking
to Phoebe. Good. A high-strung gal that age didnt need to be
tending a whole store all by herself. Wasnt safe.
Dariusd driven us all to practice that
morning in the Brown Bomber, then disappeared. Now he
showed up in spikes, knickers, and a long-johnish jersey that
didnt hide the ropy muscles in his upper body. His arms
looked like weight-lifting eels. He snapped off warm-up tosses
to Dunnagin.
Now, even in Tenkiller Id heard of Satchel Paige. By 43,
five years before he joined the majors with the Cleveland Indians,
Paige was already a legendfor pitching in the Negro
leagues and on barnstorming tours. Folks said he threw an
invisible fastball. Paige would sometimes call in his fielders and
retire the opposing side on strikeouts. No oned ever come
closer to unhittableness than Satchel Paige. A Negro sports-writer
in Kansas City had called his right arm a bronze sling-shot.
Other black ballplayers had talents like Paiges, but Paige
had charisma and got the ink, so far as any colored player got it
back then. And so youve never heard of Hilton Smith, a hurler
for the Kansas City Monarchs whofrom 40 to 46mayve
been the greatest pitcher in the world. In 41, Stan Musial and
Johnny Mize hit against Smith in an exhibitiontried to hit
against himand both claimed never tove seen a better curve.
Darius Satterfield, who couldnt play in the CVL because
his skin shaded out too dark, had downhome Satchel Paige-Hilton
Smith stuff, an eye-boggling arsenal of pitches. Just
watching him warm up, I knew Id never faced anyone like him.
No one. Darius threw like a kicking mule or a jinking hare,
depending on the need, but was the only player on the field
Mister JayMac didnt call mister.
Several Hellbenders had trouble with Dariuss rolenot
his bus driving, or bag toting, or his trainers work on sore
arms and legs (good nigger work, with tradition behind it).
What bothered some of the fellasnot Hoey, though, or
Dunnagin, or most of the starters, whether Dixie-born or imports
like mewas playing ball with him. As if the ball flying
from Dariuss hand to their bats or gloves would weave a bit of
Africa into their own skins.
The most sickening get-that-nigger-off-the-field cry-babies
on our team were Trapdoor Evans, Jerry Wayne Sosebee,
Norm Sudikoff, Turkey Sloan (a little surprisingly), and, it
turned out, Philip Ankers. They wanted Darius for a pack
mule, not a teammate, and all that kept them from niggering
him to death or threatening to bolt to a team with a real white
man for a manager was Mister JayMac himself. Hed outright
bench them. Hed let them know any traitor to the Hellbenders
would never play in Alabama or Georgia again, if he could
help it. In fact, if the troublemakers were young and fit, Mister
JayMac would threaten them back, usually with pulling strings
to put them into uniforms, so they could go after Nips and
Huns instead of Negro Americans.
Dixie had laws against blacks and whites playing each
other in organized sports. Laws that prevented all-star squads
of colored barnstormers from showing up in small Alabama
and Georgia towns and challenging the local white heroes,
something they did profitably in Wyoming, say, or Kansas.
First, theydve had no place to stay, except in Negro homes or
their own touring cars. Second, itdve bruised the whiteys egos
to get skinned by coons in front of their neighbors. Third,
everybodywhites and coloreds alikeseemed to understand
if white folks let down their guard in something as human as
baseball, they might drop it elsewhere too.
Black ballplayers played in the South for professional
clubs in Atlanta, Memphis, Birmingham, and Jacksonville, and
on Army teams on posts like Fort Benning, Fort Stuart, and
Camp Penticuff. But even on these bases, they played other
coloreds. Forget the war. Never mind that Americans of every
shade wore one-color-fits-all khaki. Whites would go see
blacks play each other because they put on a bang-up show, but
at Atlantas Ponce de Leon Park, whites bought tickets at
separate entrances and sat in bleacher sections off limits to the
nigger hoi polloi.
Darius didnt play in the CVL, but he sure as heck took
part in practices and intrasquad games at McKissic Field. He
served as a lieutenant commander to Mister JayMac, except he
didnt very often come up and tell you to do something. He
sort of hinted you should do it. He asked if you wanted help
getting a hitch out of your swing or a sad double clutch out of
your throws to first. Mostly, Darius kept his mouth shut and
taught by showing. Usually, when he led a practice, everyone
accepted the sham that even though Mister JayMac had deputized
Darius as his stand-in, he could have tapped almost
anybody else on the squad.
Anyway, Mister JayMac had ordered a scrimmage, first
stringers versus recruits and scrubs, and Darius had drawn the
pitching start for the regulars. The regulars also got to be
home team. Us rookies and scrubs had to use the visitors
dugout and give up the advantage of last at bats. I didnt like it,
but so what?
Creighton Nutter pulled me into our dugout, where Mister
JayMac had tacked up lineups for both teams. Nutterd
been appointed our manager. Mister JayMac would run the A
squad. He seemed to want us underdogs in a snugged-up
croker sack from the get-go. Nutter studied our lineup. By
rights he shouldve drawn up our batting order, but Mister
JayMac had done it for him.
Damn, Nutter said. Weve got two pitchers at players
spots and a baby on the mound. Thank God for empty bleachers.
I read the lineup too. Mister JayMac had me batting first.
I wouldnt get to watch another hitter against Darius before I
had to face him myself.
Get on up here, Mr Boles! Mister JayMac yelled. He
wore a chest protector and a mask, ready to ump as well as to
manage. That seemed unfair, but when he sent Parris, one of
our boys, out to call the bases, I relaxed a little.
I rummaged up my Red Stix bat, crossed to the batters
box, swung it a few times. Its barrel shone red in the sun.
You drop that thing in a vat of Mercurochrome,
Dumbo? Hoey yelled from short.
At third Curriden gave an egg-sucking grin. My peckers
about that color when it gets angry.
And you wish it was that big, Dunnagin said from his
crouch behind the plate.
A bit more hoohah over my imported timber before Mister
JayMac snarled, Batter up!
I dug in against Darius with a catch in my heartbeat. My
first pitch in my first at-bat as a hired pro. It came out of
Dariuss shoulder-dipping windup so hard I hardly even saw it.
I just heard it go thwaap! in Dunnagins mitt.
Strike one, Mr Boles, Mister JayMac said.
Hoey and the other infielders chattered away, badmouthing
me: You couldnt hit the floor if you fell off a stepladder,
Boles! Cmon, Dumbo, make like the Dorsey brothers and
swing! Whassa madder, rookie? All the blood in you go into
that stupid bat!
Darius got me on four pitches, two quick strikes (the
second one swinging), a teaser high for a ball, and a peppy
slider on the outside corner I lunged at like a beginner with a
bayonet. I jammed my bat into the ground to keep from eating
a pound of red Georgia clay.
The jeering stopped: I was history.
Junior and Dobbs went down too, Junior on an excuse-me
nibbler back to Darius, Skinny on three air-pummeling cuts
that wouldve unsocketed almost anybody elses shoulder.
Seven pitches and side out. Things looked bleak for us
Mudville boys.
Pingless wonders, Muscles said, trotting in from left
after tossing his glove down. Way to go, Darius.
Philip Ankers took the mound for us, the B squad. A
fifteen-year-old hurling against good journeymen players and
cagey retreads. Nobody on A squad was less than thirty but
Knowles, a twenty-something 4-F with the same million-dollar
problem thatd kept both Mariani and Frank Ill Never Smile
Again Sinatra out of the Army, a punctured eardrum. But
Ankers looked older than Knowles, with his greasy beard and the
body of a pit bull.
In his first time out, Ankers had to face Hoey, Charlie
Snow, and Muscles. He looked to have just two pitches: a
fastball and a fadeaway. Today youd call a fadeaway a
screwball or a scroogie, and its not usually a pitch high
schoolers master. Somehow, Ankers had. Hed start it off like a
speedball, but finger-lip it. Just as it got to a righthand hitter it
jerked in and dropped away. With that pitch, he made Hoey
and Snow look like amateur-night contestants. They both
rolled out to the infield. Musselwhite, though, muscled one to
the right-field wall for a triple because Ankers slipped up and
threw him a fastball low and inside. Muscles batted left, and
that was the perfect pitch for him to cream. Ankers learned
from his mistake. From then on, he threw nothing but fadeaways
and teaser fastballs.
Jumbo was batting cleanup, but Jumbo couldnt clean
Muscles off third. Ankers kamikazied him with dipsy-doodle
junk, mostly fadeaway variations. Jumbo took a couple, fouled
off a couple, and ended up missing a pitchlike Muscles, he
batted leftthat tailed away to the outside corner. This swing
dumped him on his rear, a fall that seemed to shake the whole
infield. I thought it might take a crane to hoist him up again,
but he rolled over to all fours and got slowly to his feet.
The game went on like that. Darius made us B-squad
boys look like stooges; Ankers wriggled out of every potential
trap with a killer fadeaway. In fact, by the fourth inning,
Sloand started calling him Fadeaway. It stuck. Ankers became
Fadeway for ever after.
Goose eggs stacked up. Noon yawned like an oven. Each
time Ankers escaped another A-squad wrecking crew with his
shutout unblemished, Mister JayMac waved his regulars onto
the field and yelled Batter up! at us scrubs. He looked to be
steam-cleaning his gear from the inside out.
We wont git no rest, Norm Sudikoff griped, till the
bastid has him a five-alawm heat stroke.
I wondered about that. Should a rookie like Ankers pitch
more than five hard-throwing innings? Come our next CVL
game, would us Hellbenders have the bounce of boiled spaghetti?
And how many times would Darius make me look like a
fool? Coming to my third at bat in the top of the seventh, Id
struck out swinging and a second time counting the stitches on
a goofer thatd dropped through the strike zone.
Now I felt semipanicked. Guessing what Darius planned
to throw would pickle your brain. Because you couldnt guess,
you had to watch and react. So far Id watched and reacted a
lot less well than Id just watched.
Its the old red-stick wagger, Hoey welcomed me.
Wave that baton, maestro. Conduct yourself back to the
bench.
I dug in. Darius threw me some chin music for a ball, but
the pitch did what he wanted, moved me off the plate. Next, a
curve on the outside corner, just beyond my swing, for a called
strike. I edged up a little. The next pitch jammed me, a
hundred-mile-an-hour bullet. I swung in self-defense. The ball hit
my bat handle and nubbed out between Hoey and Curriden on
a half dozen skittering hops.
Contact! On my follow-through, the bats barrel had splintered
like kindling, helicoptered into the outfield, and landed
on the grass. My broken bat had gone farther than the ball. I
ran with five inches of bat handle in my fist. My hands and
forearms stung from the vibes. Hoey made a grab in the hole
and threw off-balance to Jumbo. Parris, umpiring at first,
signaled me safe, and not one A-squad player yelped, not even
Hoey.
Darius came down off the mound and ambled over to
take Jumbos flip-back. Danl, he said, about twenty feet away,
I reckon you could outrun the word God.
It took me a minute, standing there winded, to realize
hed complimented me.
But not much happened after my scratch hit. Junior
struck out, and Dobbs blooped one to Knowles at second.
Sudikoff came up. He had bulk, but Darius owned him.
If I wanted to get around the bases, Id have to shove myself
along and hope a passed ball, a wild pitch, or an error on an
infield grounder assisted me. But despite his praise, Darius
didnt seem to think Id steal. He pitched from a full wind-up,
not a stretch. It worked because, after his second pitch to
Junior, he whipped the return throw from Dunnagin over to
Jumbo and nearlybout picked me off.
On his first pitch to Sudikoff, though, I got a decent lead
and broke for second the moment Darius twisted into his
wind-up. Bless his heart, Sudikoff lunged at an obvious ball,
missing it by a foot or better, to help me out, and I did a quick
down-and-up slide into second, where Hoey knelt for a throw
that never came.
Id stolen on Darius, not Dunnagin, and when Darius
had the ball again, he walked over and peered at me like I was a
channel cat with legs.
Like I say, he said.
On his next offering to Sudikoff, I edged off second and
darted for third as soon as his motion home committed him to
throw. I barreled. Sudikoff laid off a low fastballhed already
swung at one for meand Dunnagin, uncoiling from his
crouch, leapt in front of the plate and fired the ball to
Curriden at third.
All my B-squad teammates popped up from our bench to
watch me slide. The peg from home had me nailed, but my toe
hooking the corner of the base got under Curridens tag.
Nutter, coaching third, gave the safe sign. Mister JayMac,
out from behind the plate, agreed. A cheer went up from the
B-squad bench, the A-squad boys groaned.
Darius sashayed over, loosy-goosy, to get the ball from
Reese Curriden. He gave me a smirk. The smirk didnt seem to
be at me, though, but for me. G, O, D, Darius said. From
then on, he pitched from the stretch. Idve been nuts to try to
steal home on him, or on a catcher as smart as Dunnagin.
Anyway, I had no chance. Darius got Sudikoff on strikes, the
third one a swing a herd of chiropractors couldve retired to
Bermuda on.
Sudikoff flung his bat away. Pesky damned nigger.
Darius had tove heard him, but he strolled to the
A-squad dugout with his back straight and his head up and
spoke not a word.
Just about then, I saw somebody in the bleachers behind
our dugout: Phoebe Pharram, Mister JayMacs great-niece.
My first thoughtpretending not to see herwas, Did
she see my hit? Did she see me steal second? Did she see me
slide into third like the great Mike King Kelly?
Dumb. Phoebe was jail bait and blood kin to my boss.
Why in Cupids name would she take a bead on me anyway?
Ichabod, shed called methe high-pockets drip in an old
American short story. Besides being a drip, I couldnt talk. For
Gods sake, my nickname was Dumbo.
The game goose-egged on.
But in the bottom of the eighth, Jumbo rambowed one
off Fadeaway over the right-field wall, and Fadeaway fell apart,
yielding four more quick runs on a series of walks and hits,
including a triple by Darius.
Fadeaway slapped his glove against his leg. His face got
this weird stove-in look. He began blubbering. Mister JayMac
went out to the mound.
That hulksome galoot! Fadeaway nodded in at Jumbo.
Him and that biggity damned nigger!
Shut up and sit down. Mister JayMac put Quip Parris
in for Fadeaway. Parris retired the next three batters. Darius
trotted home on Hoeys sacrifice fly, though, and at the end of
eight full innings the score stood six to zip.
That was the final score, although in the top of the ninth
I sent Charlie Snow to the wall for a long out, the best hit ball
of the game against Darius.
At the end, Darius shone with sweat. It encased and oiled
him. I could see him pitching another nine, eighteen, maybe
even twenty-seven inningswithout grouse or twinge. Darius
shone like a jewel.
In the clubhouse, Mister JayMac gave
Junior, Fadeaway, Dobbs, and me our own lockers. Mined
belonged to Bob Collum, a popular player axed along with
Sweet Gus Pettus, Roper, and Jorgensen. We peeled off the
faded masking tape marked with their names and stuck on new
strips marked with ours. My locker hunched between Curridens
and Jumbos. Curriden sat next to me removing stirrup
socks, then skinning out of his clay-stained sanitaries. Jumbod
flat-out disappeared.
You did good out there, Dumbo, Curriden said. A leg
hit and a liner to the wall.
I nodded my thanks, silently damning Hoey for hanging
that nickname on me again.
Darius no-hit yall except for that legger, Curriden said, so
you were the B boys heavy artillery today.
I grinned, sort of, and took off my sweat-sopped shirt.
Behind us, a shower ran. Dunnagin stood in it singing Im
Getting Tired So I Can Sleep, crooning in a tenor better than
half your big-band soloists. It echoed out to us prettier than a
clarinet.
No one wants to bat against Darius, Curriden said. If
he uz white and his manager let him pitch every other day, hed
win thirty-five games a year in the CVL. Forty. And you, a
bony little dink, lined out to Snow up against the Feen-A-Mint
sign. That makes you bout the hittingest thing, ever, against
Darius, Dumbo. No crap.
I looked around. Had Darius and Jumbo gone back to
McKissic House in their uniforms? Cripes. Sweaty flannels
weigh a ton. And the smell . . .
Curriden stood up buck naked. Darius showers on the
visitors sideelse hed have to wait for us to finish up in
here.
I tapped Jumbos locker.
Jumbo? Curriden said. Keeps an extra glove in there.
Some sanitaries. Cept for that, he dont use it at all. Wont
shower here. Foots it back to McKissic House.
Theres something wrong with him, Turkey Sloan said
from Fadeaways bench. Hes different from the rest of us.
Sloan looked at me. Till you come along, sweet cheeks, none
of us but him had a private room.
Something wrong with him? Like what?
I reckon he was born with some oddball deformity,
Sloan said, like hed just read my mind.
Or its a war injury, Hoey said. From the last war. A
problem like that guy in the Hemingway book had.
The Germans blew his pecker off? Parris said. Naw,
the poor guys an auto-wreck victimthats my theory.
There was an empty lapse in the guessing. Hoey seized
Parris and knuckled the crown of his head. Your theory makes
me feel like a heartless jerk.
Parris weaseled away. People should feel like what they
areso they dont wake up thinking theyre Albert Schweitzer.
Or Jack Benny.
Oh, Rochester, somebody said in Bennys radio voice:
Oh, Rochester.
In a gravelly copy of the voice of the colored fella that played
Rochester, somebody else said, Yes, boss?
This back-and-forth went on all around me. I couldnt
get into it. Even if I couldve talked, Idve felt too much like
the new kid in the neighborhood.
I went to the farthest spigot in the shower room and
faced into it so the other guys in there could see only my
skinny backside and jutting ears.
Listen, Okie, Mariani said. Dont drop the soap. You
bend down to fetch it, Norman there starts to get ideas.
Screw you, wop, Sudikoff said.
Baby, dont you wish, Mariani said.
Dont drop the soap. I flash-backed on Pumphrey and the
lavatory on the troop train. As quickly as I could, I finished
showering, dressed, and beat it.
Outside, I walked under a bleacher section, part of the
concession area behind home platea cave for hot-dog stands
and program hawkers. Shady. Semicool. All around me, support
girders, chain-link gates, and cubbyholes for vendors.
Then I saw Phoebebeside an aquarium in the main
gangway. Coming through the turnstiles from the parking lot,
you got funneled past this tank, a yard long and two feet tall,
mounted on a belt-high base. Phoebed climbed to the tanks
rim on a set of movable wooden steps.
Hello, Daniel Helvig Boles. Her voice echoed.
I lifted my hand: How, squaw. Did Mister JayMac use
tropical fish to homify his ballpark? Did Phoebe have to feed
them?
Cmere, Boles. She waved me towards her. I dont bite.
If yore careful, neither does Homer.
I walked over. Even without a stool, I stood about as high
as she did. Water in the tank. A gravel bottom. A thin strip of
sunken wood. Some ferns, like seaweed on stalks, poking up
from the gravel, hula-dancing in the currents.
You met Homer yet, Boles?
I shook my head.
Well, look, she said. Lockings how you meet
him. I wont pull him out for you to shake his iddy-biddy hand.
I bent. I stared. The narrow strip of bark hovering above
the sand, floating in the tanks thready green murk, had eyes.
One end of the mystery thing resembled a tail.
There, Phoebe said. Youve just met Homer.
I kept staring at the critter. It really did look like a piece
of bark. With legs. With eyes. Like sombodyd epoxied it out
of sycamore cork and pecan twigs.
Donchu even know what Homer is, Boles?
I just kept staring at him. It. Whatever it was. I might not
know much, but a lunk who tipped his ignorance to a girl was
doomed to regret it.
You dont know what Homer is, Phoebe accused.
I tapped my head to show her Id already safely stored the
information. I was a walking Smithsonian Institution.
Horsefeathers. You dont know squonk, do you,
Dumbo?
Dumbo! Idve rather she called me Ichabod. If shed
said it again, Idve strangled her.
Homers yore stupid teams mascot, stupid. A hellbender.
You ever heard of a hellbender, Okie boy?
Phoebe Pharram seemed to want to show me up, like
some pitchers will taunt a patsy theyve just struck out. I stood
a frogs hair away from dumping her into the tank.
Ill bet you think a hellbenders a damned soul who
breaks alla Mr Pitchforks rules, Phoebe said.
I stared at her, one eye starting to tic.
A hellbender. Git it?
I banged the tank with my fist and headed for the parking lot.
Wait a minute, Boles! she called out. I dont mean
nothing, talking this way. Mostly, its other folks giving me
what-for, not vicy-versy. Mostly, I jes give back what Ive
awready got. Gits to be a habit. When somebody caint or
wont talk, I imagine em giving me what-for before its even
come. Then I give em it back thout em ever giving it to me to
begin with. You git me?
Funny enough, I did. The explanation almost made sense.
I walked back to look at Homer again. My jug ears were
reflected in the tanks glass, but Phoebe kept talking. My looks,
or my lack of them, hadnt scared her off.
A hellbenders a quatic salamander, she said. I found
this un in a creek when I uz nine. Uncle JayMac gave me a
dollar for it and put it here in McKissic Field when Highbridge
entered the CVL. I feed Homer, change his water out,
tote him home when the seasons over. Got a table in my
bedroom for his tank. During ball season, though, I keep a
typewriter on it and write letters to homesick sojers.
How thoughty and patriotic. FDR, or Mrs FDR, should
give you a medal, Phoebe.
A corporal and two PFCsve awready proposed to me.
They think Im older. I sorta let em spose it. My letters read
pretty passionate, I guess.
The knuckleheaded hussy. Idve laughed, but she had no
more sense of humor about herself than I did about me. We
both had the teenage disease of raging self-solemnity.
Baseballs a mugs game, Phoebe lectured me.
Sometimes its jes not very nice. Yall do things in front of a
thousand folks I wouldnt do alone in my own bedroom.
One minute she admitted writing pretty passionate letters
to servicemen and the next she suggested it embarrassed
her to see a ballplayer setting his jock straight.
We do have one thing in common, Phoebe said.
Okay, I thought. Dont keep me in suspense.
Good reasons for not being in the militaryIm a
woman, and yore, well, yore a dummy.
Yeah. I put my hands behind my ears and made em flap
like a flying elephants.
Anyway, if you didnt have yore . . . problem, youd
join the Army. Wouldnt you?
Hmmm. In another five and a half months, Id be eligible
for the draft. Maybe my dummyhood was a ploy Id come up
with, subconsciously, to sidestep it.
Dunnagin walked up behind us from the clubhouse.
Youre right, Phoeb. I know Id rather be out killing Nips
than chasing a CVL pennant. It burdens my mind, getting left
out of all the fun.
Yore old, Dunnagin, Phoebe said. But not so all-fired
old you couldnt enlist. She looked more or less pleased to see
him.
If only you knew, Dunnagin said. Methuselahs got
nothing on me. If I dont make it back to the bigs this year, my
careers over. Ill be yesterdays papers.
Youd be doing more for the Uncle Sam in the Army.
And more for yoresef.
Im boosting civilian morale, Dunnagin said. Im
boosting player morale. They see me on the field, they think
anybody can do it. They go home fortified and hopeful.
Shame on you, Phoebe said.
Dunnagin didnt look too abashed. Danny, the Bombers
about to leave. Hustle it up.
I nodded, and Dunnagin wandered away.
Phoebe came down off the stair step. In the tank, Homer
wriggled, stirring the murkthe first time Id seen him look
like anything other than a spongy piece of bark. Hooray. No
ball team wants a dead or paralyzed critter for its mascot.
Go git yore bus, Phoebe said. Yore keeping a slew of
folks stewing in a real pressure cooker.
I did a two-fingered salute.
You do play a whangdoodle shortstop, she said. And
you can run like a autumn crop fire.
Unexpected praise. But I still wanted to add, Did you
know I can outrun the word God? A local authority told me so
today.
My speech problem, thank the Lord, kept my mouth shut.
On my second evening in McKissic House, I tried to delay entering the hole I
shared with Jumbo. Its heat and the idea of huddling on the other side of his
throat-tickling grass mat while he slept or readwell, why bother going
up? I couldnt talk to him, of course, and the curtain hed hung
between us said he didnt much care. Thank God. Maybe hed taken
me on as a roommate because I couldnt talk.
Back from practice, I washed dishes, sat next to some
guys playing hearts, and listened to dance-band music and
news reports on the old cathedral Philco. John L. Lewis, said
H. V. Kaltenborn, had taken his soft-coal miners out on a
strike that had patriots gnashing their teeth. Up in Alaska, the
Armyd finished mopping up Jap resistance on Attu, and the
Eleventh Air Force kept on bombing the hell out of Kiska. Not caring
for cards, I worked on a jigsaw puzzlethe Eiffel Towerwhile
listening to the radio. Nobody bothered me.
Finally, I had to go up. McKissic House had an eleven
oclock curfew. Rest and regular hours guarded Mister
JayMacs investment in us. Hed fine you for missing curfew.
Anyway, Jumbo lay stretched out on his bed reading.
Hed tied back the grass mat divider so a breeze from the
window could reach him, if a breeze ever blew up. His fan
bumped and shimmied like a stripper in a whalebone corset.
From the door I could see into the whole room. What I saw
flabbergasted me.
Jumbo had put a big bronze vase of cut flowershydrangeas,
snowballs, Queen Annes laceon the floor next to my
cot. The flowers helped. Except for the labels on the cans of
his Joan of Arc red kidney beans, the room didnt boast much
color. The flowers livened the place up. I saw Jumbo look up at
meeven in that heat, his eyes made me shiverand started
to walk over to my cot. Jumbo lifted his hand.
You played well this morning.
I ducked my head. Hed played well too. Hed knocked a
heavy balata ball out of McKissic Field and fielded like a man
with some kind of magnet for horsehides sewn into his glove.
But his looks made me think of the other players guesses
about him. Of injury, pain, and death. Up close, I had an
aversion to his looks. Well, I was no prize myself.
My reaction to Jumbo reminded me of my reaction as a
twelve-year-old to my best friend in Tenkiller after hed had a
sledding accident. My friends name was Kenneth WardKenny
for short. One snowy winter, Kennyd cracked up on a
Northern Flyer going over a ledge into a sink hole lined with
briars. He dropped ten or twelve feet. The briars ripped and
scraped him like so many darning needles wrapped in wet
cotton. The plunge knocked Kenny out. He concussed. It took
three of us to rescue him, and we mayve hurt him even more
pulling him up through all those white brambles to the edge of
the drop-off. Kennys dad got there somehow and hurried him
to the emergency room at the Cherokee County hospital. I
didnt visit Kenny in the hospital, but I saw him several days
later at the Wards little house in Tenkiller.
Kenny didnt look like Kenny. He looked like . . . I
dont know, the victim of a thousand wasp stings. Or a pit-bull
attack. He had two puffy black eyes (actually, more red and
purple than black), an out-of-kilter nose, and a set of lips more
like an albino channel cats. Kennys looks scared and confused
me. Away from his house, I started to think I hadnt seen
Kenny at all. Instead, Id called on something strange, ugly, and
maybe a quarter dead planted in the Wards house by UFO
people. I didnt go again. Even when Kenny got over his injuries
and began looking like the buck-toothed kid Id once
known, a weirdness between usdisgust on his part, shame on
minekept us from getting friendly again.
Jumbo made me feel the way Kenny, with his nose
whacked askew and his eyes in bruised pouches, had made me
feel.
Last night, Jumbo said, I was, ah, less than friendly.
Uh-uh. I pointed at myself, meaning hed behaved more
or less okay but Id acted like a total jerk.
A lie.
Because hed acted at least as jerky as I had, not speaking
more than three sentences all evening and dividing his digs the
way small-town Suthren doctors once split their waiting rooms
into a half for coloreds and a half for whites.
I hung thatJumbo nodded at the mat rucked up
against one wallassuming youd prefer a little privacy to no
barrier at all. Jumbo grimaced. He made a face. And he could
make a face, a spasm of cheek and forehead muscles.
Forgive. I seldom talk. U. S. slang confounds me. All my
speech originates in the written word. He gestured at his book
shelves. My tastes run to philosophy, science, religion, medicine,
Victorian novels, and current events. And my tastes inevitably
influence my diction.
Wow. An attackfor Jumbo, anywayof verbal diarrhea.
It embarrassed him. He rubbed his hands like a man
trying to coax blood into frost-bitten fingertips.
To you, the mat must have appeared a method of exclusion,
not a courtesy.
I stayed mute, of course.
If you want privacy, pull the mat out from the wall. If
not, leave it. He looked me in the eye. At certain points,
whatever your state of mind, Ill draw the mat. Do not view my
doing so as a sign of pique or ill favor. I sometimes require
solitude.
I nodded. Okay. Understood.
And you have my standing consent to draw the mat
whenever you wish. Would you care to do so now?
Not really. Outside of Dunnagins counsel in the gazebo,
no other talk Id had in Georgia had lasted so long or promised
so much. On the other hand, I couldnt add much to it. So
I started toward my cot again, and Jumbo halted me again.
Youve lost a button, he said. Give me your shirt.
I undid the buttons I had, gave him my shirt, and sat
down on my cot. Jumbo took a needle, thread, and a carved
ivory button box from one of his shelves and sewed on the new
button in five minutes. Youdve thought his sausage-size fingers
wouldve made the task hard for him, but he did it like a
pro, quick and neat.
Here, he said, holding up the shirt. It danced like a flag
in the breeze from his fan, dropped like a windsock on a calm
morning, then danced again. Fetching my shirt, I noticed the
grooves, calluses, dents, and scars in the ends of Jumbos fingers.
The skin looked dead at the tips, white or yellowish, with
whorls of brown or feverish pink on their inner pads. The
clay-and-persimmon smell came off him in ripples. Near to, his
eyes were like peeled orange slices with the membranes still on.
It was my lost friend Kenny Ward all over again.
On the floor by Jumbos headboard sat a cardboard box
full of oldbut not too dirtybaseballs. Most used balls in
those days ended up in the servicemens Baseball Equipment
Fund so the men at military posts here and overseas could play
ball for training purposes or to relax. Even I knew that. The
Baseball Equipment Fund was a big patriotic deal. So this box
of balls struck me as suspiciously like hoarding. What did
Jumbo plan to do with them? The team had all the baseballs it
needed, and none of this battered bunch looked fit to plump
out a scarecrow with, much less to toss or fungo around.
Jumbo reached down and grabbed a ball. He inserted his
fingernails into its split seam and peeled its more or less glossy
cover off. He dropped its balata core back into the box and
spread the leather cover open on his knee. He rubbed the cover
with his thumb, as if to work out its only visible stain and
make it spotless again, then flip-flopped the spread cover and
rubbed its other side.
They lived once, he said. Think of itthese skins,
once the hides of tall and powerful animals. He stopped
rubbing and laid the split jacket on top of the other baseballs
in the box, the way you or I would return a silver dollar to a
display of rare coins.
That chilled me. I slipped my shirt on.
Jumbo said, May I call you Daniel rather than Mr
Boles?
I hesitated a second before nodding.
Then you may call meyou may think of meas
Henry. Two men lodging together in such intimacy shouldnt
have to stand on oppressive formalities.
I figured just the opposite, but what could I do? Jumbo
had some age on me and deserved a little respect. He stuck out
his hand to seal our bargain. I took it with as much zeal as Id
grab a hot wire.
Daniel, know me from henceforth as Henry. His hand
felt cold and dry, spongy and hardlike sliding your palm
into the grip of a solid-rubber statue.
Henry didnt strike me as a suitable name for a power-hitting
ballplayer. Hank did, like in Hank Greenberg, but
Jumbo hadnt asked me to call him Hank.
A moment yet. I have a small present for you, Daniel.
From under his pillow, he took two notebooks and a handful
of pencils snugged together with a rubber band. One notebook
you couldve used in school, a fat thing the size of a Leo
Tolstoy novel. The other, a little bigger than a deck of cards,
you could carry around in a pocket. One of the pencils, already
sharpened, had a pocket clip on it. Jumbo dumped this caboodle
into my hands.
Should you wish to converse with me, he said, simply
write in the smaller notebook, tear out that page, and hand it
over. I will respond as its substance dictates.
I hammocked Jumbos gifts in my shirt tail and duck-walked
to my cot, where I spilled them all out.
The larger notebook you may use as a journal, Jumbo
said, chronicling your exploits throughout the remainder of
the season.
Hey, Id graduated. Why would I want to scribble rehashes
of ballgames in a notebook? It was the thought that
counted, I guessed, but Idve been happier with a candy bar or
a risque pulp magazine. In the next moment, though, I started
thinking I might enjoy keeping a record of my days in Highbridge.
I didnt plan to live in Georgia, after all, and one day I
might like having a memory token of my minor league career
here.
Jumbo, however spooky his looks or weird-sounding his
talk, had begun to treat me like a roomy, not just a pestiferous
kid Mister JayMacd dumped on him. Probably, my play at
McKissic Field had turned him around. What did that say for
his scale of values? If Id played lousy, would heve gone on
treating me like a cockroach? But, hundreds of miles from
Tenkiller, I appreciated his turnaround, whateverd caused it.
I fell asleep in my clothes, with my notebooks and pencils
nearby and Jumbo reading Wendell L. Willkies One World.
When I woke up, darkness everywhere.
Jumbo had pulled his woven-grass mat into place between
us. I could smell it. I could also smell the gritty perfume of the
hydrangeas in their bronze vase. I undressed and lay down
again. Jumbos snores wheezed above the whirr of the fan, and
our grass divider swayed.
Mister JayMac called our first Friday
home game against Lanett Scrap Metal Collection Drive
Night. Every kid under eighteen who brought a pound of scrap
metala shovel blade, a bag of spent cartridges, a hoard of old
soup cansgot in free. Ushers collected the scrap, and
businessmen-volunteers turned it over to the War Production
Board.
Anyway, the stands rocked, a lot of the crowd teenagers
or soldiers from Camp Penticuff. It being wartime, GIs got in
for half price, paying fifty cents for baseline seats and watching
the skirts closer than they did the game. Milt Frye, the PA
announcer, told us attendance stood at over three thousand, a
better than decent turnout even if beaucoups of our admissions
had paid for their seats with scrap metal.
CVL teams staged most games on weekends. Sometimes
youd have a series start on Thursday or Wednesday evening,
but you could always count on open Mondays and Tuesdays,
as travel days or as make-up days for rainouts.
In the clubhouse, Mister JayMac announced his starting
lineup. Not a rookie in it. Junior, Skinny, and I would ride the
bench until somebody got hurt or one of us was needed for
strategic reasons. Fadeaway wouldnt play at allMister
JayMac planned to start him on Sunday.
Thats just two days rest, Fadeaway said.
Everybody gaped like hed just decided not to join the
bucket brigade at an orphanage fire.
Way I figure it, its three, Mister JayMac said. Hell,
son, youre fifteen, arent you?
Yessir.
Then your recovery time for both pitching and screwings
bout as fast as itll ever be, and I didnt recruit you to
screw. You gonna pitch when I ask you to or jes when you feel
like it?
When you ast me to.
Good, Mister JayMac said. Stop pouting.
Twilight crept over the field. The electric pole lights came
on, bright as day. That summer, no one worried about a Nazi
U-boat swimming up the Chattahoochee to knock out a riverside
shipyard or a lone supply barge. Under the lights, McKissic
Field looked like a wonderland: green grass, shiny signs, the
gauzy ghosts of cigar and cigarette smoke curling everywhere.
Even the tiresome smell of burnt peanuts couldnt douse my
wonder. When Mrs Harry Atwill, the organist, played Take
Me Out to the Ball Game, I got shivers. It seemed the sky
would split open, like a milkweed pod, and an air force of
seraphim drift down to mingle with the crowd like Mardi Gras
partiers.
Creighton Nutter pitched that night, and if he hadnt had
his stuff, Highbridge wouldve lost. Our regulars played like
cripples. They missed signs, booted grounders, misplayed easy
flies, overthrew cutoff men, and so on. In the fourth inning,
our fans began to catcall us. They singled out Trapdoor Evans
for abuse after he turned a basket catch into a thump to the
groin that left him writhing on the grass. Charlie Snow dashed
over from center to pick up the ball and throw it in.
Ball-less Evans! a row of soldiers chanted. Ball-less
Evans!
Over the PA system, Milt Frye said, Steady now, folks.
Your management has great regard for our military, but we
wont tolerate smut from any quarter.
Ball-less, ball-less, ball-less Evans! the GIs chanted.
Fryes scolding didnt faze them a bit, and when he barked,
Those persisting in immature hooliganism, even men in uniform, will
be removed, a whole row of them turned towards the press
box and shot it a rippling sequence of birds that wouldve won
a drill competition at Camp Penticuff. But, truth to tell, no
spectacle was grosser that night than our Hellbender regulars.
Even folks with kids had more kindly feelings for the GIs than
they did for our stumblebums.
Going into our final at bat, after playing like blind men,
we were down just one run. Nutterd kept us in it, pitching
smart and refusing to rattle even when his fielders performed
like dancing hippos. The shock of the nighta blow to Mister
JayMacs strategy of letting us humiliate ourselves at homecame
when we somehow won the game, three to two.
It wasnt pretty. Or just. But so what?
The win put us at eight-and-eight on the season. Opelika,
Eufaula, and Cottonton lost that same nightto Quitman, Marble
Springs, and LaGrange respectivelyso we
picked up a full game on both the Orphans and the Mudcats
and broke a fourth-place tie with the Boll Weevils. But it still
teed me Mister JayMac had held us rookies out, especially with
his starters sucking wind like they had.
What would our starters have to do to pit the boss to
give us new boys a chanst? Junior asked Skinny Dobbs.
Lose, Skinny said. Them buggers got to lose.
Actually, Skinnyd got that wrong. We
played our next game against Lanett at five on Saturday afternoon.
The leagues schedule makers had decreed a number of
twilight weekend games, to go on without lights. A nagging
droughtd dogged the South for years, crimping its ability to
make electric power. Day and twilight games eased demand.
That was good. War plantsshipyards, torpedo factories,
assembly lineshad to run around the clock. You could squeeze
a whole game in between five and sunset, if you didnt go to
extra innings.
Anyway, just before we dressed out for the second game
in the Lanett series, Darius came into the locker room and read
the lineup to us:
Batting first, playing shortstop, Danl Boles. . . . He
went on from there, but the only other items to get my interest
came in the seventh and eighth spots, where Junior and Skinny
would bat, Junior playing second base and Skinny taking over
from Trapdoor Evans in right.
Is this a joke? Buck Hoey asked Darius. I hit one for
three last night. Nobody else did better.
Mr Curriden did, Darius said. If you hadnt walked
up his backside on that pop-up, he mighta done even better.
That knot on yo fohead go down yet?
Easy, Darius, Hoey said. Youre treading thin ice.
Darius rubbed his oxfords toe across the concrete floor.
Aint no ice in here atall. Was, you could put it on that knot
you got.
Read it again, Junior said.
So Darius read the afternoons starting lineup again. My
body began to hum, like a tuning fork. Saturday, June 5th,
1943. Soon, Id actually start at short on a pro ball club.
I cant believe Mister JayMac wants me on the bench,
Hoey said. Ive got a nine-game hitting streak going.
Darius popped the lineup card with his knuckles. Nothing
here say the change got to last fo awways, Mr Hoey.
That drilled a nerve with me. If I booted a chance, or
fanned with runners in scoring position, Hoeyd most likely
have his job back tomorrow.
So whatn hell we sposed to do! Evans asked Darius.
How bout rest? Darius said. Seems logical to me.
The hell with that, Hoey said.
Well, capn, Mister JayMac wants you to coach first.
Vito Mariani was scheduled to pitch. Buck up, Buck. Ill
set em down so fast you wont have enough bench time to rub
the nap off your pants.
Darius left. Hoey stared at the floor. Knowles, the deposed
second baseman, went over to Junior and put a hand on
his shoulder.
Tear em up, kid, he said.
The game wasnt a laugher, but the Linenmakers never
really got close either. Kitchen Fats for Victory Night followed
Fridays Scrap Metal Collection Night, and although nobody
got in free for bringing in hamburger grease or bacon drippings,
Milt Frye and three usherettes saw to it every fan who
turned in a can of solidified fat got his or her name put in a
drum for a drawing during the seventh-inning stretch. Top
prize was a weekend for two in Atlanta, with a room at the
Ponce de Leon Hotel. Anyway, the drawing seemed to mean as
much to the civilians in the stands as the ball game did.
You could smell the rancid kitchen fats everyoned brought
in. The idea was that munitions factories would melt down the
drippings to extract their glycerin, then use it to make bombs
or howitzer shells. Kitchen Fats for Victory. After the war,
though, I heard wed used it to make soap. Dirty dogfaces have
low morale, and the services needed our kitchen fats for soap.
But asking civilians to turn in fats for soap didnt sound
romantic. Or sanitary. So the government told the public our
used grease would go to make devices for blowing people up,
and wham! the home front got with the program.
Anyway, I went three for four. A squib behind second
base was my first safe bingle in money ball. A row of GIs gave
me a standing Oout of sheer relief the Hellbenders wouldnt
stink worse than the stadium did, like we had last night. They
loved it I could put wood on the ball.
Hoey, coaching first, sauntered over to me as I returned
to the bag after making my turn. The center fielderd just faked
a throw behind me, a threat I hadnt much credited.
Dont let the cheers go to your head. Those guysd cheer
a little old lady tripping on a popcorn box.
I watched Charlie Snow, a super hitter, settle in and tap
his spikes with a Louisville Slugger hed lathed into the shape
of a skinny champagne bottle.
Me, Id be ashamed to reach base with a dying gull like
the one you goofy-bunted out there, Hoey said.
I shrugged. My batting average was a perfect thousandat
least for now.
Watch OConnors pick-off move. Get tagged out here
and you might as wellve gone down swinging.
Back in the coachs box, the umpire Happy Polidori
told Hoey, and leave the poor kid be.
Up yours, Polidori. Its my job to give advice to kids with
marshmallows for brains.
Move it, Polidori said. Your body, not your mouth.
With no go-ahead from anyone, I stole second on
OConnors first pitch. The GIs came to their feet, whooping.
Lanetts catcher didnt even try to throw me out. I lifted a hand
to Hoeyto show him I hadnt hurt myself, not to mock himbut
he kicked up a cloud of red dirt, p.o.d.
Snow hit a long single to right. I came home. The whole
rest of the game went like that. We ended up winning eight to
threeno laugher, as I say, but no knuckle-whitener either.
My other two hits were a bunt toward first and a high bounder
off the pitchers rubber. Hoey badmouthed them too, calling
them luck, saying the next time I went to church I should drop
a C-note in the plate. It almost, not quite, relieved me when the
Linenmaker right fielder ran down my longest clout of the day
and webbed it against the Belk-Gallant sign for the games
second-to-last out.
Hoey applauded this catch. He liked seeing me robbed of
a four-for-four outing on a ball Id flat-out creamed.
At shortstop, though, I did manage a perfect day. Despite
his earlier brag, Mariani didnt pitch well. Junior and I
consistently got him out of jams by turning double plays or knocking
down potential RBI rollers. On our double plays, we clicked
like castenets.
For the fourth time today, Milt Frye told us all, your
double-play combo was Boles-to-Heggie-to-Clerval, tying a
team record set back in 39.
Whistles, applause, foot-stomping. Mrs Atwill swung
into an up-tempo version of I Get a Kick Out of You.
Danny Boles hails from Tenkiller, Oklahoma, Frye said.
Then, stretching it: Boys got a few quarts of Cherokee blood,
making him the first uprooted Injun to find his way back
South on the Trail of Cheers. Frye said Junior Heggie, a
Georgia boy from Valdosta, deserved some applause too, and
Hoeys spit probably turned to battery acid in his mouth.
After the game, a scratchy recording of the National Anthem
blasted through the speakers. I stood on our dugouts top
step with my cap over my heart listening to the boozy chorusing
of our remaining fans. Mister JayMac had to order the field
lamps snuffed to get them to leave.
In the clubhouse, Lamar Knowles told Junior and me if
we kept it up, Boles-to-Heggie-to-Clerval would become as
famous in the CVL as Tinker-to-Evers-to-Chance was in the
bigs. He wasnt kissing tail eitherhe meant it. Juniord taken
his starting job, and Knowles couldve moped or cried beginners
luck, but he didnt. My respect for him hitched right up
the pole.
After wed showered, Mister JayMac came in and said the
most important thing about the evenings game wasnt breaking
in some jittery rookies or tying the old club double-play mark,
but that for the first time since our season opener on May the
7th, the Hellbenders had a winning record.
Tonight, gentlemen, we stand nine and eight. Thats
good: a winning percentage of about .530. But it wont take
this or any other pennant. Beat these loom-operating yokels
one more time, tomorrow, and well head down to Quitman on
Wednesday to pluck the Mockingbirds three out of three.
Opelika lost again tonight, and LaGrange is in another
extra-innings brawl with Cottonton.
Keep scratching and clawing, gentlemen. By the end of
August, we should be at the king-rooster top of the whole
CVL cock pile.
Everybody slapped backs and hurrahed.
Hoey said, Who starts at short tomorrow?
That turned our jazz-band parade through an empty
swimming pool into echoey silence.
Mister JayMac said, Given our performance in our past
two games, who do you think should start tomorrow?
Given my performance over the past sixteen games, I
dont think thats a fair question. Sir.
Perhaps we should vote on our lineups every day. Ask
team members to judge the fairness of my decrees.
Hoey shut up. He could win this debate only with a
pistol or a hypnotists help. Everyone but Evans, Sloan, and a
couple of others wanted him to clam up. Hed turned our
victory party into a nitpicky postmortem.
Good, Mister JayMac said. Curfew tonights one
A.M. No, to hell with that. Be in bed by midnight and
sleep late tomorrow. He left.
Oh yeah. In that nights game, Jumbo didnt have a hit,
but hed sucked up every chance at first smarter than a Hoover
and played his monster heart out. So if Buck Hoey was ammonia
under our noses, Jumbo was honeysuckle and mint.
That nightthree or four in the
morningI had a powerful urge to pee. Kizzyd set metal
pitchers of lemonade all over the parlor after our game, and Id
drunk gallons of it. Id sweated away a lot, but about a quart
still ached for release, so I got up, tiptoed past Jumbos bed,
and bumbled down the hall to the third-floor John. Weird
thing: When I got there, light showed in the cracks around the
door, the knob wouldnt turn, and I could hear a rough drizzle
on tin.
It wasnt Jumbo. Hed been in bed, a forbidding ridge of
lumps and gulleys wheezing dreamily. Somebody from downstairs
had come upstairs. Why? Had Sosebee organized a crap
shoot up here? It teed me off. Whered this Hellbender
palooka get off hijacking our shower?
My bladder was a pulled-pin bomblet. I needed relief. I
didnt have time for the jerk in the shower to finish up, towel
down, and let me in. Id flood the hall first. I looked for
alternatives: open windows, flower pots, umbrella stands. But
nothing presented itself. I had just one option, to creep
downstairs and check out the bathroom on Dunnagin, Junior, and
everybody elses floor. So down I went. Each step on that
narrow staircase threatened to trigger me. If I went off, Id turn
the steps into a waterfall and drown my teammates in their
bedseveryone in McKissic House but Jumbo and the skinnydipper
in our shower.
I kept my bladder dammed and reached the second floor.
Nobody was in its bathroom. Nobody. I dashed in and drained
off my pain. My physical pain. It still irked me some unknown
soul had stolen our bathroom. The one down here had four
times the square footage and more soap and toilet paper. Why
would another lodger sneak upstairs to ours?
For privacy, maybe. Somebody on the second floor didnt
want spectators while he showered.
I started back upstairs. As I groped my way up, somebody
else groped down, and I froze at the bottom of the chute.
The person coming down looked suspiciouslydeliciouslylike
a woman. By the glow of an electric sconce on the wall, I
could see that although the woman had some age on herlate
thirties, early fortiesshe was a looker, maybe even something
of a vamp.
She had on a towel. Anyway, she sort of had it on.
Obviously, she hadnt expected to meet anyone. She
didnt scram, though. She cockedher head and smiled, her
strawberry hair pulled back from her forehead and swept over
her shoulder in a damp strand. She clutched that strand and
kept her towel from slipping with the same hand, her left. I
know it was her left because she had a wedding band on it.
Mr Bolesour brand-new whangdoodle shortstop.
My shorts covered more than a bathing suit wouldve, but
I blushed. If Id rubbed myself with horse liniment, I couldnt
have felt any hotter or glowed any brighter.
Relax, kiddo. Ill let you by. The woman laughed.
Two ships passing in a tight. She pressed herself, towel and
all, against the wall. Climb on past, handsome.
I climbed with my head down. Shadows moved around
us, but the amber sconce gave the womans shins, arms, and
breastbone the gleam of knife blades. Head high, Idve stared
straight up her towel into the valley of the shadow. As I
climbed, I quaked. Stand me, any day, in the batters box
against a guy with a ninety-miles-per-hour speedball.
On the very same step as the woman, I brushed her hand
and something damp landed on my instep. Her towel had
fallen. I reached down to get it. My brain had shut off. My
bumpkimsh chivalric instincts had kicked in. When I straightened
again, I was gazing on her nakedness, breathing the
scented glycerin of Palmolive. I froze. I got dizzy. I felt like a
statue on a revolving lazy Susan.
Thanks. She didnt hurry to rewrap. Predate it.
I shut my eyes and dropped to my knees. In a darkness of
my own concoction, I walked on them to the top of the stairs.
When I got there and nerved up to look back down, the
womand started moving again. The towel wrapped her from
midback to just below the pretty half moons of her fanny. I
peeked. When she reached the second floor and angled out of
sight, I crept back down and peeked again. She sashayed to a
room at the far end of the hall and tapped on the door.
Curriden opened it and pulled her inside.
Skinny Dobbs roomed with Curriden. Did this woman
whore for a living? Had Curriden and Skinny hired her for an
orgy? Did an early morning of sweaty sex qualify as an orgy if
more than two folks got in on it? Hold it. Maybe Curriden
and the woman were secretly married. Bingo. The womand
worn a ring. She looked about the right age to be Curridens old
lady. But if so, why didnt they live in Cotton Creek like all the
other married Hellbender couples?
As I watched, the woman came out of Curridens room
wearing a polka-dot white-on-red dress and a big wheel-brimmed
hat with ribbons. She had a straw handbag. She toted
her high heels by their straps. She ran on her toes to the other
staircase and tripped down its steps. Shed vamoosed before I
could draw any conclusions except she was stunning and really
knew how to wear clothes. (She also knew how not to wear
them.) And she knew I played a whangdoodle shortstop.
That gave me pausenot that she liked my play, but the
phrase itself.
I didnt move. Mostly, I didnt move. An old friend
found the door of my shorts and poked his head through for a
one-eyed look around. I was about to ease my old pal when
Skinny Dobbs came up the main staircase shuffling like a
drunk. He crossed to his and Curridens room. He didnt have
a hangover, he just hadnt slept much. My old pal collapsed in
wrinkles. On her way out, Curridens wife had probably told
Dobbs, sleeping on a parlor sofa, he could slink back to his
roomher and Reeses conjugal visit was over.
I crept back upstairs, with a side trip to the steamed-up
John, and sacked out again. Didnt get much shuteye, though. I
kept seeing that lady jaybird-nude on the stairs.
The CVL, I learned, had started playing
Sunday games in its very first season. People called Dixie the
Bible Belt. Even at midweek, street preachers in Highbridge
could work up a powerful rant and a healthy amening crowd.
Nobody opposed Sunday baseball, though. It took place after
church and ranked right up there with God, flag, motherhood,
and hunting.
Fadeaway Ankers started the final game of our series
against Lanetton either two or three days rest, depending on
whether you figured it like Fadeaway or Mister JayMac. During
his warm-ups, he grinned and preened and threw screaming
BBs, like he enjoyed being out there, which, I guess, he did. He
wanted his first Linenmaker hitter bad as a starveling bluetick
wants its next soup bone. And he struck him out.
Mister JayMac had tapped me, Junior, and Skinny to
start too. Unofficially, it was Rookies Day. Officially, it was
War Bonds Day.
In the outfield, groundskeepers had hung War Bonds
banners over some of the biggest signboards, with the okay of
the companies whose ads they hid:
Neither Skinny nor Curriden looked at full speed. Even
though Curriden hadnt gotten up for church, he could barely
haul his ass around. That gal in the towel might as wellve
strapped an icebox to his back, he had so little vim. Skinny
looked sharper; he could run and throw. Sometimes, though,
he stopped dead and opened his eyes so wide he seemed to be
trying to breathe through his eye balls.
What ails you two? Mister JayMac asked after our
second at bat. Yall stay up last night herding woolyboogers? I
swan, Mr Curriden, with some rouge on your cheeks, youd
look like a dead man. He put Hoey at third for Curriden and
Evans into right for Skinny.
When he did, Hoey said, Why dont you move Dumbo
over to third and let me pick up where I left off Friday? Sir.
Mister JayMac just looked at him, his eyes as dead blue as
an old ladys hair rinse. From then on, though, Hoey played
next to me at Curridens spot, never making an error. None of
the right-handed Linenmakers could pull Fadeaways scroogie,
and none of their lefties ever hit to third.
The game was a walkover. I rapped my first extra-base hit,
a triple off the EDICT OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE
banner, and a single too. Every other Hellbender, Hoey and
Evans excepted, got good wood too, and when Fadeawayd
finished pitching the sixth, Mister JayMac lifted him for
Sosebee.
Thats plumb stupid! Fadeaway shouted in the dugout when
he realized whatd happened. I got a three-hitter going!
Relax, Mr Ankers, Mister JayMac said. All you can
do if you stay in is lose it.
My daddy taught me to finish what I start.
Parris said, He shoulda taught you a little respect for
Mister JayMac made a hush-up gesture at Parris. You
like to finish what you start, Mr Ankers?
Damn right!
Then I want you to know you started six innings. Youve
jes finished em. A helluva fine job you did for us too, start to
finish.
Fadeaway looked confused, a bird dog thrown off the
scent. Then Mister JayMacs reasoning sunk in, and he
bought it, the whole bolt. He strolled along the bench and sat
down next to Haystack with a hambone-licking smirk on his
face.
You wont lose, Haystack said. Youll either win or get
a no-decision if Sosebee fucks up. Youre sitting pretty.
I dont sit no other way, Fadeaway said.
Sosebees stuff didnt sizzle, but the Linenmakers
couldnt hit a raindrop in a south Georgia thunderstorm. At
games end, the scoreboard read 13-0. The crowd whooped so
loud we could hardly hear the recording of the National Anthem.
Afterwards, Mister JayMac cornered me in the dugout.
You youngstersve come along jes fine, Mr Boles. My sister
Tulipa is a bred-in-the-bone baseball gal, but she never scouted
me a kid worth leftover pot liquor till she stumbled on you.
Youre hitting .750 after two games, and you play short as
good as anybody, including Ligonier Hoey. Ligonier was Buck
Hoeys real first namehe came from a town in Pennsylvania
called Ligonier. So he went by Buck.
Grab a shower and meet me under the grandstand in
your street togs, Mister JayMac said. Dinners on me
tonight.
Why not Fadeaway, Junior, and Skinny too? I thought.
Why not Jumbo, for that matter? Hed had another long home
run and another errorless day at first. Did proving the
shrewdness of Miss Tulipas judgment entitle you to dine every
Sunday evening with the boss?
I met Mister JayMac in the concessions area. He stood next to Homers tank,
talking to two peoplefemales?half-hidden by girder shadows.
One of the females, I saw, was Phoebe. The other had to be her mama, the
daughter of Mister JayMacs dead brother. Made sense, I guess, but
my heart double-clutchedI hadnt seen Phoebe at any of our
recent gamesand my hands turned cold as ice tongs.
Ah, Mr Boles! Mister JayMac shouted. Got some
ladies here Id like you to meet!
I sauntered over. Phoebe was Phoebe, of coursebut
tonight she had on a dress instead of blue jeans, and a pair of
tiny gold earrings instead of one gaudy exploded pearl. In her
open-toed heels and her wide-brimmed straw hat, she looked
like a miniature woman. Her mother . . . well, I reddened.
My eyes glanced down to flit over the candy wrappers and dirty
popcorn around the base of the aquarium.
Mrs Luther Pharram, better known around here as
LaRaina, and her lovely daughter Phoebe, Mister JayMac said.
Ladies, Mr Daniel BolesMr Boles, Mrs Pharram and
Phoebe.
Not too long ago, LaRaina Pharram and Id bumped
into each other between the second and third floors at McKissic
House, only shed worn a towel and Id worn shorts and an
all-over blush. My blushd come back, prickly as radioactive
shellac. Miss LaRaina, despite the damage shed wreaked on
Curriden and Skinny, looked bright-eyed and amused. Every
time I glanced up, she gave me a batted eyelashmockeryand
a smile halfway between a grin and a pout.
We have a secret, her grin-pout said. Arent you glad you
cant tell my uncle? Sorry, Uncle JayMac, LaRaina Pharram
said aloud, but I cant call this handsome fella Mr Boles.
Handsome! More mockery. I wanted not to like this
womanshe had a husband overseas, shed spent the night
playing slip-skins with a ballplayer, shed gotten a big kick out
of my embarrassment, and now she was making mock of mebut
I still felt more or less kindly toward her.
Mister JayMac said Miss LaRaina could call me Daniel,
if she liked, but hed stick to Mr Boles.
My, such a fuddy-duddy, Miss LaRaina said.
Phoebed picked up on my jitters, and my behavior struck
her as rude or immature. Her pretty lips seemed tove wrapped
themselves around a sour lemon drop.
So hows Miss Giselle? she suddenly piped, then went
back to sucking her make-believe candy.
Fine, Mister JayMac said. Now. Where would you
gals advise taking our hero for a victory supper?
Ast him where hed like to go, Phoebe said.
Mister JayMac said, But hes ignorant of his choices.
Ast him what hed like to eat, Phoebe said. American,
Eye-talian, Chinese.
Mister JayMac lifted an eyebrow at me. At that moment,
I had all the appetite of a spooked cat. I was trying to adjust to
Miss LaRainas presence and cooling down from nine innings
of sticky twilight baseball.
The Live Oak Tea Room at the Oglethorpe, Miss
LaRaina suggested.
Phoebe looked at me. Thass a nice place.
The Linenmakers booked rooms at the Oglethorpe,
Mister JayMac said. The tea rooms going to swarm with
em.
Miss LaRaina smiled at her uncle. I know.
Mister JayMacs jaw tightened. Have a care, he said.
For decency. For your daughter.
Phoebes not likely to put the mash on a Linenmaker.
She hates ballplayers.
Not awluvem, Phoebe said.
You couldve fooled me. The pinched V between her
eyebrows and the pucker of her mouth didnt say fondness, not
in any language I knew.
The Oglethorpe Tea Room is out, Mister JayMac said.
Corporal Johns over on Penticuff Strip? Miss LaRaina
said. Its got an attractive clientele.
Absolutely not.
A joke. Its closed today anyway. Sunday sure limits a
bodys choices here in Highbridge.
Mister JayMac herded us into the parking lot, where
Darius had pulled the Caddy as close as he could to the main
gate, given the fans still about. Darknessd just begun to settle,
and several groups of people smoked and gabbed in the parking
lot. Dance music drifted from a radio through an open car
window. Artie Shaw, Benny Goodman, Glenn Miller.
Before we could get in the Caddy, a hefty man in overalls
and a frowzy woman in a print dress came over. Their clothes
seemed to have as much dust as cotton in them.
Jordan McKissic? the man said. Thass you, aint it?
It is. How may I help you?
Show him, Sue Beth.
The womanSue Bethpushed a paper under Mister
JayMacs nose. He retreated a step.
S from the War Department, the man said. Hit us a
coupla days back. Its our Donnie.
He aint coming home, the woman said. He done got
kilt in North Africa.
Im sorry, Mister JayMac said. A terrible thing.
You oughta be, the woman said. You done for him.
You took him when he coulda had himshoulda had hima
heping-job zemption. Eye-talians didnt kill our Donny. You
did it with a stinkm fountain pen.
Mister JayMac said, Please, folks, tell me yalls names.
The Crawfords, the man said. Ira and Sue Beth. Little
people, ordinary folk. Ordinary! Crawford didnt exactly
shout, but his kettle-drum voice carried. Some loitering fans began
ambling towards us.
Donnie never shoulda gone! Sue Beth Crawford did
shout. And you damn-all know it too!
Mrs Crawford, God bless your martyred son, Mister
JayMac said. Im sorry every American boy who dies has to
make that sacrifice.
Yessir, Ira Crawford said. But the draft board had its
quota to fill so you thew our innosunt young un in.
Every boy in the hoppers innocent in one way or another.
Thank God we dont yet have an army of criminals and
cynics.
Yore precious ballplayers dont go! Crawford accused.
Not one Hellbender comes from here, Mister JayMac
said. Theyre too young or old, or their local draft boards
exempted them. I pulled no strings for any player.
Mebbe you did, mebbe you didnt, Ira Crawford said.
But you caint say the same bout thatere black nigger. How
come he aint on bivouac someres?
Darius heard thishe had tovebut he opened the
Caddys rear door and helped Phoebe and Miss LaRaina in.
Mr Crawford, federal law forbids inducting Negroes in
greater numbers than they appear in the general population.
Hothlepoya County has almost as many coloreds as whites so
we take more than most boards, but a limit exists.
Hog slop, Ira Crawford said.
Look, even if we loaded the Army with coloreds, theyd
end up in service unitsthe quartermaster corps and such.
They probably wouldnt fight and die like you and the missus
seem to want em to.
Near the big Caddy, you couldve heard a cricket poot.
Sue Beth started to cry, Ira cursed. They joined hands and
walked back through the dusty lot to a dented Ford pickup
loaded down with feed sacks.
I am sorry about your son! Mister JayMac called out.
I bet, said somebody unseeable in the crowd.
The Crawfords slammed opposite doors and rattled away
in their spavined pickup.
Git in, sir, Darius said. Ill drive yall to the Royal. He
meant the Royal Hotel, a place with a restaurant supposedly
even better than the Oglethorpes.
Off we rode. Mister JayMac sat next to Darius, brooding.
Miss LaRaina jabbered away, happy that the Hellbenders had
won and made a move in the standings.
In the Chamberlains room at the Royal
Hotel, we all had prime ribexcept Darius, who ate beef soup
and French bread in the kitchen. (Judging by the fruity smell
on his breath after, hed also tossed back some of the house
wine.) Mister JayMacs mood improved. Miss LaRaina was his
date. Phoebe, going by age and seating arrangements, was
mine.
Talk ran from baseball to a possible invasion of Sicily to
Phoebes plans for her senior year at Watson High. I learned
that in Georgia the senior year was only a students eleventh of
public schooling. (Not until after the war did Georgia create a
twelfth year.) That made menext to crackers Ankers,
Heggie, and Dobbsnearlybout a college man.
S a bother you caint talk, Phoebe finally said to me.
You shore this condition aint some sort of numbskull play for
sympathy?
Be nice, Phoeb, Miss LaRaina said. And purge yourself,
please, of those irritating caints and aints.
I caint, Phoebe said. It aint in the cards. And Im
bout as nice as Mr Boles deserves.
Mister JayMac changed the subject. You talked when I
met you. You stammered, but you talked. What happened?
Smart, Uncle JayMac, Miss LaRaina said. Youve
asked him to tell you what rendered him speechless.
Taint a silly thing to ast if hes faking, Phoebe said. It
makes tons o sense.
Idve liked to tell Mister JayMac that whatd struck me
dumb was seeing Miss LaRaina jaybird nude on the stairs, but
that sequence of events didnt exactly gibe. Everyone stared at
me, though, like I might talk; and if my tongued worked, Idve
given them the Gettysburg Address just to be polite. In fact, I
tried to talk: a gargle, a gag, a hack.
Which disgusted Phoebe. Dogs, she said.
In my inside jacket pocket I had the small notebook
Jumbod given me. I pulled it out. Mister JayMac saw me
patting my pockets for something to write with and reached
me his fountain pen. (The one hed used on Donnie Crawfords
draft papers?)
I opened my notebook and thought. What could I tell
these people? I couldnt tell them about Sergeant Pumphrey.
Hell, I couldnt even think about that. I probably didnt think
about it. I had no mental picture of Pumphrey at allthe man
didnt exist for me in Highbridge.
So I printed: On the train from Tenkiller I had a had dream. My
daddy flew at me in a plane. A long metal runway rolled at me and knocked
me down. When I woke up I couldnt talk. I tore out the sheet of
paper and passed it across the table to Mister JayMac.
Some dream, he said.
Read it to us, Miss LaRaina said, and he did.
Gimme, Phoebe said. Mister JayMac handed the
ripped-out page to her, and she read it aloud right after him,
making my dream sound like a comedy film. Then it aint
physical, she said. Its jes head-stuff. If you wanted to bad
enough, you could talk.
I took the page away from Phoebe, flipped it over, and
printed: It wasnt head stuff once. My daddy smacked me in the throat
when I was 12. Took me 2 yrs to learn to talk again.
I gave the page to Mister JayMac, who read it aloud for
Phoebe and Miss LaRaina. From then on, thats how I talked,
scribbling my messages and passing them on to Mister JayMac
to read out.
Your daddy mustve been a prince, Miss LaRaina said.
I loved him. He taught me how to play ball.
A man who teaches his boy to play ball caint be a total
jackass, can he, Uncle Jay? Phoebe said.
I know your opinion of baseball players, child, Mister
JayMac said. How do you want me to interpret your question?
No sarcasm meant, Phoebe said. Not a hair.
There are nicer words than jackass, Miss LaRaina told
Phoebe.
Like prince, Phoebe said. I spose.
Miss LaRaina gave Phoebe a razor-sharp stare, then
turned to me again. Is your daddy still alive? If so, where is
he?
Alive. A guy on the train (Pumphrey! I refused to think) said
hes in Alaska working on planes.
Working on them or flying them? Miss LaRaina said.
In your dream, you saw him flying a plane.
But Id written what I meant. I nodded at Mister JayMac,
and he read my last message again. Forget that in my dream
Dick Boles had flown a P-40 Warhawk. I wrote:
I dreamed baseball on a steel runwayin the Alooshans. Me vs. a air
force ground crew. Baseball in the snow.
Well, it guv you laryngitis, Phoebe said.
Young Mr Boles lives, breathes, and dreams baseball,
Mister JayMac told the women.
Miss LaRaina leaned over the linen-and-lace tablecloth:
You share a room with Jumbo Hank Clerval, Ive been told.
How do you like that? What kind of man is he?
A big man. I like it fine.
Phoebe and Mister JayMac laughed. Miss LaRaina,
though, kept studying me, like I knew more than Id written.
Mama, Mr Clervals a big, smart man, Phoebe said.
He reads books and wallops long homers. What else do you
need to know? Why do you think you need to know it?
Mr Clerval incites curiosity, Miss LaRaina said to me.
He has mystery. Hes alsowell, hideous, one could say.
A man has awful little control over the face God chooses
to bestow upon him, Mister JayMac said.
Neither does a woman, Miss LaRaina said. Which
doesnt stop her from trying. She kept looking at me. I had
the key, she seemed to think, to the mystery of Jumbo Hank
Clerval. I could make use of what I knew to reveal him to her.
Except I couldnt. I still didnt know what made Fadeaway
Ankers tick, much less my brooding highbrow galoot of a
roomy.
Poitely I wrote: Hes a vejiterran. He snores. He gave me this
notebook. (Vejiterranlike he came from Vejiterra, a planet in
some flaky Flash Gordon universe.)
Mister JayMac, Miss LaRaina, and Phoebe all laughed,
and I got self-conscious about my spelling and my sloppy
printing. I decided to sit tight as Tarbaby from then onnothing
out of my mouth, nothing more from Mister JayMacs
pen. I passed it back to him. Miss LaRaina didnt notice.
How do you suppose itd feel to kiss him? she said.
Phoebe moved like somebodyd shot a jolt of current
through her. Our silverware jumped, our glasses shook.
Phoebes face turned red. Anger? Shame? A cocktail of them
both?
Mama! she cried. Thats vile!
Why? Because Mr Clerval doesnt resemble Clark Gable?
Phoebe looked down. No, Mama. Youve a husband in
Europe in the war.
Goodness, girl, I was speaking hypothetically. Dont
blow a gasket. Tell me, Daniel: Is it wrong for a married
woman to ask a hypothetical question about kissing another
man?
Mister JayMac said, Id venture, LaRaina, that its not so
much wrong as unwise. Thought precedes action.
In many cases, it follows. I speak from both experience
and observation, Miss LaRaina said.
Scuse me, Phoebe said. She got upshe almost
knocked her chair overand wove her way through a jungle of
fancy-set tables to the restroom. The Chamberlains Room had
filled with customers. The noise level was so high you couldve
raved on about bomber production in Marietta without drawing
a warning from a plainclothes OSI man. During the war,
you expected such crowds. Movie theaters, bistros, and restaurants
ran at full throttle. People had money, and worries to
chase.
Phoebs awfully touchy this evening, Miss LaRaina
said. She lit a cigarette.
She loves her daddy, Mister JayMac said.
So do I. The smoke around Miss LaRainas face and
shoulders swirled dreamily. It made her green eyes look shady
and then as bright and hard as holly leaves.
Yes, Mister JayMac said, but do you stay busy
enough?
That got Miss LaRainas goat. My lord, Uncle, Im still
the secretary of the Officers Wives Club at Camp Penticuff. I
chair two different fund-raising committees of the Highbridge
Womens Club. I helped organize your last three war drives at
the ballpark. I read books. I go to movies. I write Luther
cheerful letters. Im also a mother.
I havent forgotten. You shouldnt either.
Miss LaRaina blew out a stream of smoke like a genie
from an Arabian lamp. Get me out of here, I wished. My
fidgets pulled Miss LaRainas attention.
Your all-knowing boss thinks Im a neglectful mother,
Daniel.
No, LaRaina, Mister JayMac said. Its just
that
She cut him off. Actually, he fears I may be a . . . a bad
example. Is that it, Uncle?
The timesre out of joint, LaRaina. The climates at
once permissive and judgmental. For your sake, as well as
Phoebes, you should try to hold your reputation as wife and
mother above reproach.
Ah, Miss LaRaina said. Caesars wife.
If the analogy fits.
Do as I say and not as I do. Miss LaRaina stubbed
out her quarter-smoked cigarette in an ashtray, grinding it like
a woman with a grudge.
LaRaina, Mister JayMac said.
He hates it. Im often as enamoredhypotheticallyof
the players he imports as he is. What can I say, Daniel? I like
men. Im young yet. All my hormones work.
Youve said a good deal too much. Mister JayMac
didnt raise his voice: he mightve just said, Its raining out.
Uncle Jay understands hormones, Miss LaRaina said.
Even though he was born during the Trojan War, his flare up
in all their ancient splendor at least twice a week.
I wanted out of there bad. A spaniel that strays into a
family argument gets its butt kicked.
Darius dropped off Miss LaRaina and
Phoebe at their house in Cotton Creek and drove Mister
JayMac and me home to McKissic House.
I felt nothing but relief getting back upstairs with Jumbo,
even in our stifling attic room.
Good evening, he said, then went back to reading
Willkies One World. Because hed nearlybout finished it,
he didnt say another word to me until bedtime.
Good night, Daniel.
Believe me, Id appreciated his silence up till then.
In the second week of June, we went on
the road against Quitman and Marble Springs and played good
ball.
We didnt sweep either series, though. That next Saturday,
we split a doubleheader against the Seminoles, losing the
opener on a squeeze bunt RBI in the bottom of the twelfth.
Talk about peeved! We revved for revenge in the so-called
nightcap (so-called because the sun never had a chance to set)
and shellacked them three to zip in about ninety minutes. We
got some nutritious shuteye that night and ambushed the poor
saps again on Sunday.
At the end of my first road trip, we had fourteen wins
and ten losses. Because Opelika and LaGrange had been playing
like drunken Looney Tune characters, the pennant race
tightened. We had a homestand against Eufaula and a big road
trip against the Orphans and the Gendarmes scheduled at the
end of the next week. I got a glow on thinking about it. Wins
in those games could say a lot about that summers final standings.
Now, some pro leagues, including the Negro bigs, liked
to play a split season because they always had more personnel
changes than the two white major loops. At summers end, they
had two pennant winners, a first- and a second-half champeen,
and a playoff to decide the overall victor. Mister JayMacs
wartime philosophyand he had a lot of say in the CVLwas
simple: Since no teamd get more than a half dozen new
guys once play started, we should pull one hard-fought season
with the guys on board. If one team ran away with it, attendance
might falter, but that summer we had balance at the top
and lots of jockeying around during the dog-day swelter. So
the fans never jumped ship. Even bunglers like the Boll Weevils,
the Linenmakers, and the Quitman Mockingbirds drew
crowds when Highbridge and the other top teams came to
town.
On the road, we traveled in the Bomber, with Darius at
the wheel and Mister JayMac in the catbird seat behind him. In
other towns, the boss depended on taxies for transportation, or
obliging locals with cars, or his own sore feet. But because he
had a lot of friends around south Georgia, you seldom saw him
walking. Sometimes hed hijack the Bomber. Ration stamps for
gas never posed him a problem.
Hellbender players didnt stay in motor courts or hotelswith
the exception, of course, of Hank Clerval. Jumbo
wanted lodgings in commercial hostelries, and he got his way
because, well, he could play. Also, he cowed even Mister
JayMac, who still didnt care for Jumbos taste for private
roomshis arrangements with locals to board his players were
thriftier than running a hotel tab. I benefited from Jumbos
stand because I got to stay with him in hotels. Or I guess I did.
Maybe I just lost my chance to meet some charming folks. But
whether in Highbridge, Quitman, or Marble Springs, where we
shared a beat-up cabin in a motor court near Seminole Park, I
often felt like a cockroach, a bug underfoot. Jumbo seemed
more at home in these places than I did.
With a draw on my first paycheck (I never told anybody a
soldier on the train had stolen my money), Id bought a used
radio, but Jumbo didnt like me to play it, not even to catch up
on war news. He preferred books to radio programs. He
thought war, even news about it, uncivilized. When I turned
on my set in our motel, he clomped around his mat and clicked
it off, the scars at his lip corners glowing like coals.
The hostilities of nations revolt me. They prey upon
and increase the petty insecurities of men.
Unlike baseball, I thought.
But, hey, what a speech. Jumbo belonged in politics. He
should run for dogcatcher. If he nixed public appearances and
ran a radio campaign, he might even win.
I sat there on my cot, scared and angry. Couldnt heve
just asked me to turn the radio down? Somehow, though, he
picked up on how bad hed browned me off.
Im a pacifist, Daniel. Even had I not been too tall for
the services, conscience would have required me to resist my
own induction. Frankly, I would have run away.
This speech didnt bleach the blackness out of my mood.
At my first team meeting, hed labeled bad ballplayers traitors.
Now he was talking lily-livered trash.
My only citizenship, if I possess one, is Swiss. In both
war and peace, Switzerland remains neutral. Jumbo lumbered
back to his bed. Outside, a thousand cicadas whirred.
Bus trips aboard the Bomber would fag
you out faster than a boulder-pushing contest. The speed limit
was thirty-five miles per hour. That turned a trip to Cottonton,
our farthest pull, into a five-hour fatigue fest. Mister
JayMac tried to avoid travel on game days, but if we had two
series on the same road trip, he couldnt arrange off-day travel.
Usually, though, CVL schedule makers set it up so back-to-back
away series occurred against teams just two or three hours
apart. On my first road trip, we lost to Quitman on Friday
night and left town at nine the next day to get to Marble
Springs by noon, two hours before the twin bill we split there.
The rided drained us so bad, we did great not to drop both
games.
If you began fresh and had a cloud cover, the bus rides
could be a hoot. Sosebee played guitar, Fanning harmonica,
and just about everybody else could mouth a Kleenex-and-comb
kazoo or drum a seat back. Dunnagin and several other
guys sang. Darius told funny courting stories, on himself, his
buddies, or players no longer with the team, tales that skirted
sleaze by zeroing in on his heroes hopes, then ticking off all
their missed connections and comeuppances. Wed fall out
laughing, but not Old Stoneface, Darius. His singing voice,
though, was a frogs croak, and the only musical instrument he
really knew how to play was the Brown Bombers clutch.
Riding back to Highbridge, Mister JayMac always made
us review our games. With a score book open on his seat, hed
defend or apologize for so-so plays, and asking everybody to
analyze our botches. Wed also discuss opposing hittershow
wed got them out, how to retire them in future games.
Play better, Sloan always said. Jes play better.
Gentlemen, we play better by practicing, Mister
JayMac said. By thinking about what weve done that didnt
work. By reviewing from all sides what actually may.
Thinking too muchll kill you faster than a jilted honey
with a Smith and Wesson, Charlie Snow said. Snow had the
best ballplaying instincts on the club. He flowed from one spot
to another and hit with the grace of an otter sliding off a rock.
Think beforehand, Mister JayMac said. Not during. Most
bush leaguers never go up cause they dont want to put in the
before and after work necessary to improve.
Other clubs dont do this, Fanning said. They use bus
trips to cool down and have some fun.
Good teams do it, Mister JayMac said. Who among
yall wants to copy the Boll Weevils?
Darius said, The K. C. Monarchs do it. The Birmingham
Barons do it. Colored clubs, both of them.
Yeah, said Sloan. And look where they are. Right at the
top o the baseball world.
Anyway, Mister JayMac guided us through that three-game
skull session for better than an hour. He asked Fadeaway
to explain why hed slacked off towards the end of Sundays
game. He told Evans to get Snow to teach him how to bunt.
I know how to bunt. I jes didnt get it done Sunday.
Then you dont know how to bunt. All you can do is fake
the stance and pop out backwards.
Fine him! Hoey shouted from a seat or two behind
Jumbo and me. Fine the sorry peckerwood!
The Bomber rolled past drought-stricken cattle pastures
and peanut fields, rattling like a gypsys wagon. Most of us had
pushed our windows up, and the air blowing through still had
a vague morning coolness.
Lon Musselwhite lurched up the aisle. Hear ye! Hear ye!
The Rolling Assizes of the Hellbender Bureau of CVL Justice
is now in session! The Honorable Judge Lionel K. Musselwhite
presiding.
Lionel? Skinny said. His names Lionel?
Baseball-Latin for Muscles, Hoey said.
Almost everybody else clapped or stamped. Muscles held
up his hand. Darius glanced back and cried, Stop! Yall gon
bust the bottom outta this boat! That helped some. So did
Mister JayMac lifting his hands and making stifle-it gestures.
But the hubbub went on, and the Bomber did seem about
ready to burst open and spill us onto the blacktop. In the
pasture whipping past, moon-faced cows watched us go by.
Muscles said, Sergeant-at-Arms Clerval, ten-HUT!
Jumbo got up, his head turtle-ducked to keep from scraping
the ceiling.
Sergeant-at-Arms Clerval, remove from this assembly
anyone whose behavior upsets the scales of justice, Muscles
said. Toss em out a window.
Yessir. Jumbo didnt smile. Even in his clumsy stoop,
he towered like a grizzly. It was half a joke and half a real
threat. When everyone got quiet, he sat back down.
Muscles said, Mr Evans, a party of some probity and
maybe even unimpeachable expertise has accused you of-
Brown noser! Hoey shouted.
Muscles ignored him. a demonstrated ignorance of
the art of bunting. How do you plead?
Give him a defense attorney! Quip Parris said.
Turkey Sloan, Evans said. Give me Turkey.
Nyland Sloan, the court hereby appoints you to defend
the incompetent accused, Muscles said. Mr Dunnagin, you
must prosecute.
Sloan traded places with Fanning so he could talk with
Evans, and Muscles asked anyone willing to witness to say so.
Sosebee, Fanning, and Sudikoff agreed to testify for Evans;
Nutter, Curriden, Hoey, and Snow to speak against.
How does your client plead? Muscles asked Sloan.
Sloan stood up and said, Your Honor, Mr Evans thinks
these whole proceedings reek of kangaroo dung. The fix is in.
A skinny kid from Brunswickhe meant Dobbsgrabbed
his starting role thout so much as a by-your-leave n
A by-your-leave? Mister JayMac roared. Mr Dobbs beat
Mr Evans like a drum! Whats this by-your-leave folderol?
Sorry, Mister JayMac, Sloan said. Just a formal legal
way of speaking. It dont mean pig tracks, actually.
Then you admit its a lie, Mister JayMac said.
Sir, youre out of order, Muscles said. Mr Sloan, how
does your useless scumbag of a client plead?
Objection! Evans said.
Shut up, Muscles said. I mean, hush. Overruled. I cant
say anything objectionable. Im the judge.
Sloan stretched out one arm and cleared his throat:
The question is, Can Trapdoor bunt?
Does he know how, or is it a stunt
When he assumes the stance and then
Allows the ball to bruise his shin
Or bounce off his bat like popping corn?
Does he deserve our ruth or scorn?
For Christs sake, Turkey, howre you pleading the sap?
Hoey said. We aint got time for the goddamn Iliad.
Sloan blinked and continued:
Is a player who cannot bunt
A guilty lout or a innosunt
Victim of our expectations?
Blame we him or those vile matrons
Who sewed the ball to such a trim
Its twisting seams bamboozled him,
Causing him to look a lout
By poking it up, for an out?
So how pleads Evans this fine day?
Like this: Nolo contendere.
Okay, Muscles said. Mr Evans, I hereby fine you two
bits and sentence you to practice bunting with Mr Snow.
Wait a sec, Hoey said. Dont I get to present my
testimony against the bastid?
Yeah, Curriden said. What about Nutter and me? Evans
cant bunt any bettern he can fart America the
Beautiful.
He doesnt say otherwise, Muscles said. Ive assessed
the fine and stated the penalty. Case closed. Court continues in
session, however. Next case!
The Bomber groaned along, belching and smoking. Nobody
said anything. I looked out the window. A line of oaks or
elms split one of the rising pastures. Their branches dripped
with Spanish moss. Red-winged blackbirds perched on the
weeds in the roadside ditch; puzzled cattle looked out from
hardwood clumps along the pasture ridge. Despite the buss
growling, I felt nearly peaceful enough to fall asleep.
Cmon, you guys, Muscles said. Next case!
Jerry Wayne Sosebee stood up. Awright. He swallowed.
I accuse Jumbo and young Boles there of hoodwinking the
boss. He gives em special road privileges that hurt team morale
and affect how we play.
A flight of locusts wheeled through my gut. The bus went
quiet as a morgue.
Mister JayMac turned in his seat. Hoodwinked?
Only Hoey got a kick out of Sosebees accusation. Jerry
Wayne thinks Dumbo and Jumbo mumbo-jumboed you, sir.
A couple of players sniggered. Guys with sense, though,
hung on bent tenterhooks and bided their time.
Do you really believe a speechless flea like Mr Boles
could hoodwink me into anything, Mr Sosebee? Mister
JayMac said.
Sir, I jes dont believe Mr Boles caint talk. I think he
could if he tried.
Case thown out, Muscles said. Mr Sosebee has based
his accusation on ill will and prejudice. Therefore
No, no, Mister JayMac said. I assume Mr Sosebee
plans to demonstrate how Messieurs Clerval and Boles hood-winked
me?
Well, mebbe Dumbo didnt, Sosebee said. Hes jes
flying on Jumbos coattails.
You excuse Mr Boles from your accusation? Muscles
said.
Yeah, sure. I mean, the real favorite in this business is ol
Goliath there.
And you see yourself as David? Mister JayMac said.
Nosir. Well, mebbe, Sosebee said. Jumbo needs to be
brought down, though. Somebody has to do it.
Brought down? From what? Mister JayMac said. Leading
us in home runs and RBIs? Playing his bag bettern any
other first baseman in the league?
Taking advantage and stirring up ill will, Sosebee said.
You must be talking about yourself, Jerry Wayne, said
Lamar Knowles. Wow. Knowles never came down on anybody.
If you pulled a merkle, hed sidle over and tell you to forget it.
Jumbo stood up. I confront my accuser.
Sosebees jowly gills went ashy-gray, but he kept facing
Jumbo across five seat backs. He didnt sit.
Mr Sosebee must speak for others too, Jumbo said.
How many agree that Mr JayMacs kindnesses to me have
undone your good will or degraded the quality of your play?
No one answered.
A fair question, Mister JayMac said. Do any of you
play sloppy ball because Jumbo gets commercial rooms on the
road?
I resent the special treatment, Trapdoor Evans allowed.
I dont play any worse for it, though.
Itd be hard for you to play any worse than you did this
past weekend, Buck Hoey said.
An honest admission, Mister JayMac said. Give
credit.
That remarkpraise instead of a lynchingopened
some more guys mouths. Sloan, Sudikoff, and Fanning all
spoke upnot malcontents, exactly, but ballplayers who always
looked outside themselves for Christs to hang on trees.
Jumbo said, Last year I lodged alone, both in Highbridge
and on the road. By nature Im a solitary person, and
Mister JayMac saw that I could tolerate the compelled camaraderie
of our sport, or of any joint human enterprise, for only
so long. I did not demand this favor. I asked it humbly and
received it most gratefully.
He speaks true, Mister JayMac said.
Sosebee kept standing: Jumbo was answering his charge.
He looked less hepped than before, though. His skin had
turned ashy-gray. Sweat showed in loops under the arms of his
shirt.
I would have agreed to the lodgings that Mister JayMac
arranges for us, Jumbo said, except that small children and a
great many female adults find mine a fearsome presence. I also
discomfit not a few men. I didnt wish to test the hospitality of
Mister JayMacs host families by presenting myself to them as
a guest. I had no wish to burden them.
He still speaks true, Mister JayMac said.
Once last year, I might add, an innkeeper in Eufaula
refused me a room because my appearance . . . offended
him. I made no clamor. I simply went elsewhere.
So whyd you accept Dumbo as a roomy this season?
Jerry Wayne Sosebee asked.
It was time, Jumbo said.
And Dumbos as close to nobody as Jumbo could get
without taking nobody, Hoey said.
I assure Mr Sosebee that Daniel cannot talk, Jumbo
said, but I reject the slur that his inability to speak renders
him a cipher.
Translation! Hoey shouted. Translation, please!
Jumbo put one big raw hand on his chest. Mr Sosebee,
if you still feel that I must relinquish the privileges I enjoy, I
have a compact to propose. A deal.
What deal? Sosebee said.
I will come down to the second floor of McKissic
House if you will take me as your roommate.
Sosebee looked at Jumbo, then at Mister JayMac. No one
wanted to give him any help. Never mind, he said. Forgit
it. He lowered himself back to his seat. Either he or the seat
cushion sighed like a bellows.
Mr Sosebee, Muscles said, the court fines you two
bits for trying to initiate a meritless proceeding. Case closed!
Court adjourned!
So ended that mornings Rolling Assizes.
Forty minutes later, we hit the outskirts of Highbridge,
gagged on the sweet stinks of the Goober Pride peanut butter
factory, and waved at a gaggle of colored young uns waving like
mad at us. Their heroesd come home.
Halfway through June, Id played inactually played
inseven straight games. Hoey got into our
games, if he got in at all, as a pinch hitter or a late-innings sub.
On my first road trip, Id had two off games in a row, the loss
on Friday night to Quitman and the loss of the twin-bill
opener against Marble Springs on Saturday afternoon. Mister
JayMac put Hoey in for me in the seventh inning of the loss to
the Seminoles, but I felt sure he hadnt won the job back. And
he hadnt. I played every inning of our next two games, strong
wins, and got more hits than any other Hellbender but Charlie
Snow, whod slipped into such a groove that his bat fired off
hits with the lickety-split golly-wow of a machine-gun.
Hoey didnt cotton to my success, but he did stop hazing me as a
flash-in-the-pan. He had to. My stats were radioactive. Of course, my
statistics didnt stay that bright all seasonnobodys
couldvebut they informed my skeptical teammates
I could play. In the long run, Id even help the bench riders,
malcontents, and jerks who didnt like me.
Up to a point, anyway.
Hoeys living arrangements made it hard to read his
changing feelings about me. He had a wife, a family, a house of
his own. At our workouts he gave me tipshow to set up
against certain hitters, how to flip the ball to Junior to speed
his crossover pivot on double plays, how to drag bunt for a
safety instead of just a sacrifice. He didnt teach me like a man
voluntarily passing on these skillsmore like somebody with
six months to live tying a ribbon round his life. Did he
badmouth me at home? His kids didnt act like he did. They
didnt blink at me like I was a messy roadkill, a polecat, say, or
an armadillo.
Back from that first road trip, I sat down to write Mama
a letter and to send her some money. (Jumbo was reading.) I
ought tove written her sooner, but how could I say a soldierd
buggered me and Id gone dummy again? Long-distance calls
were out (Uncle Sam asked you to keep the lines open for
servicemen and emergency messages), and I didnt relish trying
to explain my roomy was an ogre of a pacifist.
My first letter home:
Dear Mama,
Sorry not to write before now but Im fine. You know that already I think. If my train had recked or somebody had killed me in ball practice by mistake youdve got a telegram saying I was dead. I know you havent. People here seem nice, more or less. My roomate reads alot. Im batting over 500 and starting nearlybout every game. Hows work? Use this money for yourself. Next time I write Ill send more.Love, Danny
Id already had three letters from Mama, one mailed the
day I left Tenkiller. It came the day we squeaked by Lanett,
three to two. Everyone boarding in McKissic House got mail
in care of its Angus Road address, but Miss Giselle sorted
through it and slipped the right letters into the right
cubby-holes at our post-office wall in the foyer. Mamas
lettersshe never wrote more than a pagemade me homesick and kept
me going at the same time. I sent her clippings, to make up for
the fact my notes never ran longer than a Listenne label.
One of Mamas lettersI still have themcomplained
about a recent act of Congress:
Those co-kniving gasbags in Washington have done come up with a legal crime called PAY AS YOU GO. They ask your boss to figure about how much you would owe in taxes at the end of a year, and they order him to hold back enough each month to cover it. Itll tell in our paychecks, this BILL will. Money I used to get wont be there any more. They say its to keep us from feeling poleaxt come taxing time, but why let these THIEVES IN SUITS fiddle with our pay, just to keep us working fokes ahead of the game? Its butt-in-skee, if you ask me, uppity and dictatorlike. Watch out, Danny, their going to get you to. Old FDR turns redder every year. By the time this DAMN WAR ends, look for a Hammer & Cycle right in the middle of the Stars & Stripes.
In mid-June, we had a four-day layoff between our win over the Seminoles in
Marble Springs and our first home game with the Eufaula Mudcats on Friday. A
part of one of those days we used to travel, but the other three, Tuesday
through Thursday, felt like holidays. Practice in the A.M.s at McKissic Field, then drowsy hot afternoons and
radio-filled evenings.
Junior taught me to play poker, and he, Fadeaway,
Skinny, and I would lock up in cutthroat five-card stud, with
piles of buttons (supplied by Kizzy) for chips and pitchers of
lemonade for refreshment (likewise). If a game seemed about
to turn into a fistfight, Miss Giselled threaten us with fines or
room arrest. She seldom had to threaten twice. Once, though,
Skinny accused Fadeaway of palming an ace and left the table
to find a bat to rehabilitate Fadeaway with. Miss Giselle
grabbed Skinny on his way back into the parlor, wrassled the
bat away from him, and sent him upstairs.
Several of the older Hellbenders worked at defense jobs
on a part-time basis, punching in from one to three times a
week in the early afternoons of days we didnt have games or
mandatory team meetings. Theyd pull eight-hour second
shifts and get back to their homes or to McKissic House
around midnight, limp as boiled asparagus and almost as pale.
Moonlighters included Muscles, Curriden, Hay, Nutter,
Sudikoff, and Dunnagin. They had special arrangements with
either the local torpedo factory, Foremost Forge, or our duck-board
manufacturer, Highbridge Box & Crate. Mister JayMac
pulled a double handful of strings for themnot to keep them
out of the draft, as Ira Crawford had accused, but to find them
war work that didnt interfere with their ballplaying.
Anyway, when I learned about these set-your-own-hours
defense jobs, I understood why nobody at Monday mornings
Rolling Assizes had seconded Sosebees charge Jumbod received
special treatment. Every Hellbender got special treatment.
Some looked a little more equal than others in getting it,
but hardly anybody had to poach his own eggsif you know
what I mean. Players in the bigs and even a few blue-chip
Negro stars might make more money than we did, but Highbridge
had earned itself a dead-on nickname: Sittin Pretty
City.
It did surprise me nobodyd reraised the point about
Mister JayMacs loaning Jumbo his Caddy. Loaning a car was
personalin a way flexing your long-term political clout could
never be. Loaning your car meant you trusted the loanee. If he
didnt qualify for gas stamps, you even had to bend or play
peekaboo with the law.
On Thursday, Jumbo borrowed Mister JayMacs Cadillac
again, and Mister JayMac lent it to him. At two in the afternoon,
the Caddys keys changed hands in the parlor, just as
Fadeaway, Junior, Skinny, and I were about to start another
poker marathon.
Home before dark, Mister JayMac told Jumbo. Weve
got those pesky Mudcats tomorrow. Youll need some rest.
And he stalked on out of the house.
Jumbo squeezed the car keys in his fist and lumbered up
the stairs towards our room. I deserted my poker buddies to go
after him, but Jumbo took two or three steps at a time and got
there ahead of me. Inside, he stood holding the box of used
baseballs Id always wondered about.
I have a sick relative in Alabama, he said. I meant to
take these to him on my last trip, but, well. . . .
Your sick relative likes old baseballs? I thought.
A project, Jumbo said, hefting the box. The lumps on
his face flushed, then faded to their old chalky hues at different
speeds. Excuse me, Daniel. I got out of his way.
Jumbo carried the box downstairs, put it into the back
seat of Mister JayMacs Caddy, and drove away. His body
seemed to fill the front seat, like a Thanksgiving Day float.
He got back about five hours later, looking empty-eyed
and blue. He went straight upstairs and lay down. I carried him
some iced tea and a pan of vegetables, but found him lying in a
kind of trance, not quite sleeping but not quite keyed to the
outer world either. He didnt eat or drink a thing.
Jumbo seemed okay again in the morning. (At breakfast,
he wolfed down fruit, pancakes, and juice.) But Id had a hard
night. My weird-ass roomyd lain only feet away with his eyes
like yellow slits and his meaty paws squeezing the coverlet. I
stumbled around all morning like a codeine junkie. My first
game against Eufaula loomed.
Damn you Jumbo, I thought, Im gonna play like a zombie.
Well, I did. The Mudcats finned us. They just cut us up.
We lost that Friday, nine to one. Mister JayMac cleared the
bench looking for somebody who could do even a splinters
worth of damage against their pitcher, Jimmy Becker. Nobody
could. By the seventh inning, even Muscles and Charlie Snowd
come to the bench, replaced by Burt Fanning, a utilityman, and
Quip Parris, a pitcher. Hoeyd gone in for me at short,
Knowlesd taken Juniors place at second. Our fans had set up
catcalling clubs or gone home in a snit.
Fair-weather friends, Muscles said.
Theyre entitled, Snow said. They dont pay their
money to watch us crap our pants.
Snow, I noticed, had a strange purple bruise on the inside
of his forearm, maybe from running into the wall in the third
inning for a home run thatd barely cleareda long, fragile
injury, like a lavender-blue snake with a fringe of back hairs
and another of veiny feet. For some reason, I reached over and
touched it. Lightly. He pulled back so quick youdve thought
Id jabbed him with a cattle prod.
Lay off, Boles.
What the devil. Snow ranked with Musselwhite, Curriden,
Nutter, and Dunnagin as one of the Hellbenders
toughest characters. In Army uniforms, I sometimes thought,
those five guys could easily chase the Huns out of North
Africa.
I dont know where I got the grit, but I pulled Snows
hand towards me the better to see his snake bruise. Boy, he
mustve really collided with that headache-powder sign out
there. Snow seldom hit the wall. Even right up against it, he
always timed his leap to avoid rebounding in a drop-dead roll.
No mad Pete Reiser heroics for Snow. He didnt need em. He
always got a good jump on long flies and measured his distances.
Its not from today, Snow told me, a little friendlier.
And it aint as bad as it looks. Let go.
I let go.
My men kinve always bruised easy. Stupid, but it kept
me out of the Army, bruising easy. So Im careful. Mostly.
If you bruise that easy, Charlie, Muscles said, youre
an idiot to play ball.
At least I dont box.
Mister JayMac walked by. Anybody who plays like
CharlieMr Snowwould be an idiot not to play. He
strolled on past, pacing, flusterated, out of sorts.
Snow, I learned, wore a strip of sponge in the palm of his
fielders glove. He also wore hip pads, cloth cushions inside his
shoes, sliding pads, and a sleeveless jersey under his flannel
shirtall to help prevent bruising. People thought of Snow as
stocky because, dressed like that, he looked stocky. Out of
uniform, though, he wasnt much thicker in the chest and butt
than Dobbs or me. Batting hurt him more than any other part
of the game. The shock to his hands and forearms when he
banged out another hit would always raise a bruise. He worked
to reduce the harm by growing calluses on his palms and trying
to smack every pitch on the bats sweet spot.
A pox on us, we also blew the second game of our four-game
series with Eufaula, the opener of Saturdays twin bill.
Between games, Mister JayMac said, Win-win, lose-lose, win-win,
lose-lose! Damn the pattern yallve fallen into!
We got a win-win coming tonight and tomorrow,
Hoey said. Want us to break the pattern?
Ha ha, said Mister JayMac. Not until we get to Opelika
on Wednesday.
Funny thing, we didnt break our pattern. We beat Eufaula
in Saturdays nightcap and again on Sunday afternoon. Then,
in Opelika, we lost two straight to the Orphans (with no
parent club in the bigs and no home field until 1941, theyd
played every game up till then as roadies, or orphans), then
beat em in the nightcap of a rare Thursday-evening twin bill.
The next night, in LaGrange against the Gendarmes, we
broke our two-up, two-down jig by losing. That made us
seventeen and fifteen on the season, and nine and seven for Junea
winning record, but only just.
God! Mister JayMac exploded after the loss. That gets
yall out of your rutit puts us in a hole instead.
The two weekend series against Opelika and LaGrange,
our biggest CVL rivals, couldve given us momentum. Instead,
we lost each series two games to one and slunk home to change
our splints and savor the home cooking of the fans at McKissic
Field.
On the Monday before a trip to Opelika
and LaGrange, Jumbo came upstairs to find me writing down
my stats from the Eufaula series and weighing them against my
teammates. It embarrassed me for him to see me doing thisI
still had a sky-high batting average and came down harder on
my teammates than on myself. I couldnt quibble with Jumbos
stats, though. Hed played great on the roadmy notebook
said so.
Daniel.
I slammed my notebook shut on my knees.
Some of my library books fall due this week. Go with
me to return them. Jumbo packed a laundry bag with books.
I turned an imaginary steering wheel. Would we drive?
Jumbo smiled, sort of, and walked two fingers over the quilt on
his mattress. Uh-uh, I thought.
Please come. The heat heres barbarous and the light at
your cot poor.
The heat everywhere in Highbridge was barbarousunless
you went to a refrigerated movie show or bowling alley. A
walk to the library in Alligator Park would push our temperatures
to sunstroke levels. On the other hand, an invite from
Jumbo came round about as often as Halleys comet.
Ill help you acquire a library card, Jumbo said. Im on
very good terms with Mrs Hocking, the librarian.
I agreed to go. And, yes, we walked.
In the farmers market, people shouted at Jumbo: Way
to gig them Mudcats, Jumbo! and Hit me a rainmaker gainst
them lousy Gendarmes! And so on.
A man at a produce stall asked Jumbo to autograph one
of his watermelons with a grease pencil. He took my signature
on a big yellow squash, but only after Jumbo told him my
batting average and sold me as a future big leaguer.
Three colored boysone turned out to be Eucliddogged
our heels all the way to the edge of Alligator Park,
where Negroes seemed to be forbidden unless they were using
hedge clippers or pushing a pram with a pink-skinned kid in it.
The Alligator Park branch of the Highbridge library system
was a red brick building not far from the church Mister
JayMac, Miss Giselle, and a few of the Hellbenders sometimes
attended. It had a pot-bellied white portico and windows separated
by rose trellises or well-trimmed snowball shrubs. In
Tenkiller, this branch wouldve held every book in townmaybe
the whole countywith space left over for a LaSalle
showroom.
Mrs Hocking surprised me too. She didnt have blue hair
or a squint or blocky black shoes with ankle straps. She had a
pretty face, a plumpish body with flying-squirrel flaps on her
upper arms, and a smile that made my own mouth muscles
ache. I guessed her age as fifty-plus. She greeted Jumbo like he
was an electrocuted loved one brought back to lifeI mean,
she was overjoyed.
Its so good to see you, Mr Clerval! One of the titles
you asked me to put on reserve has just come in! Now I wont
have to send you a postal notice!
Despite being on very good terms with Mrs Hocking,
Jumbo looked startled. He unpacked his books on the central
desk and kept his mouth shut, a rebuke for all the fuss.
Mrs Hockings young assistant hovered at the far end of
the desk, eyeballing Jumbo and me the way she wouldve a
couple of prison escapees.
But youve only had these books out once! Mrs Hocking
thumbed through her card bin. You couldve renewed
them!
Yessum, Jumbo said. But to what end?
Why, to give yourself time to read them all.
I have read them all.
Oh. Then youre an awfully resourceful reader. You
must have formidable powers of concentration.
Which of my reserve titles has come in?
Why, uh, this one, Mr Clerval. Mrs Hocking picked a
small book out of a nearby stacking cart. Its very popular just
now. Mr Salmon, its last reader, checked it out two days ago
and brought it back just this morning. Perhaps you and he
should meet. You have much in common, including
Please, Mrs Hocking, hold it for me here until Ive
made my other selections.
Of course. Pleased to. Let me know if Margaret or I can
be of any further assistance.
My friend Daniel would like his own card.
All right. Does he reside in Highbridge or in Hothlepoya
County?
Like me, hes a Hellbender, Jumbo said. His stay here
will certainly outlast August,
Then hes not a resident?
His mailing address, like mine, is McKissic House on
Angus Road. For the next two and half months.
Yes, but, it appears that
What length of residency entitles one to a card?
Jumbos voice boomed through the building. Folks in the
stacks looked over at us. A little boy grabbed his mothers
skirts.
What we must do is issue a temporary card, Mrs
Hocking said gaily. If Margaret lists you as one local
reference, Mr Clerval, whom may we designate as the other?
Mr Jordan McKissic.
Certainly. Very good. Here, Margaret. Help this young
man fill out the application. Begin with his name and
His name is Daniel Boles, Jumbo said, already turning
toward the nonfiction shelves. B-O-L-E-S. Complete the form
as far as possible without us.
Of course. Of course. Mrs Hocking waved us away.
Browse to your hearts content.
In the philosophy and psychology sections, Jumbo put
his hands on my shoulders and tried to whisper:
Inside, Daniel, Mrs Hocking feels much as her assistant
Margaret doesunquiet, frightened. I realize that now. Her
overfriendliness shows the truth. She hopes to hide from both
me and herself the extent to which I repel her.
Uh-uh. Jumbo needed to believe Mrs Hocking really did
like him for himself.
Im correct in this, he whispered. From her behavior, I
should have deduced her attitude before. He let go of me to
prowl the stacks, mouthing titles and authors names, tiptoeing
around other patrons like a gigantic reshelver.
With our arms full of books, we returned to the main
desk and spilled them out like hodcarriers dumping bricks.
Mrs Hocking added Jumbos reserve book to the pile, and I
completed the card application her assistant had started.
Isnt that more than ten? Mrs Hocking stamped away.
Eleven, with the reserve book, Jumbo said. But you
may put that one on Daniels card.
Im afraid we Mrs Hocking began to say. Very
good, she said instead. He may even benefit from reading it,
should you finish it quickly enough to pass it on, Mr Clerval.
She bustled and stamped. Good day, gentlemen. Give our
rivals in your baseball matches glorious what-for.
Thanks, Jumbo said. Youre more than kind. He
shoved our loot into his satchel and led me out the door.
Outside, I looked at him with real disappointment. Hed
just called Mrs Hocking more than kind. But if hed sized
her up correctly in the stacks, that was a lie.
She desires to be a friend, Jumbo replied to my look, even
if the natural impulse to that state eludes her. I spoke to
her desire, not to the canker of her predisposition.
That had a highfalutin ring to it, but it nailed me anyway.
If Jumbo wanted to fledge Mrs Hockings better angel, he had
to have leave to appeal to it.
At the farmers market, we bought pears from a pavilion
vendor and sat on the concrete platform to eat them. Stacks of
produceturnip greens, unshucked early corn, plump tomatoes
in bushel basketsmore or less hid us from autograph
seekers. I ate my pear first, then took my notebook from my
shirt pocket and wrote out a question:
What book did you reserve?
Jumbo dug through his bag and found it. He dropped it
into my lap. I wiped my sticky hands on my pants so I could
handle the volume: On Being a Real Person by Harry Emerson
Fosdick, a self-help thing by this famous New York clergyman.
The central business of every human being is to be
a real person, Jumbo said. Mr Fosdicks opening sentence.
Back then, Fosdicks line didnt impress me at all. All I
could think of was Fearless Fosdick, the cartoon defective Al Capp
had created in Lil Abner to send up Dick Tracy. Fearless
Fosdick strolled around with bullet-hole windows in himthey never
seemed to bother him much. Anyway, I imagined this Harry
Emerson Fosdick guy sitting at his typewriter with bullet holes
in him, banging out On Being a Real Person despite looking like a
wounded cartoon character himself.
I wrote Fearless Fosdick? on a notebook page and handed it
to Jumbo, whose expression reminded me of the look you see
on a babys face when its trying to load up a diaper.
I believe this Mr Fosdickhe tapped the bookis
more fearless than most acknowledge. It takes . . . balls to
write a treatise on achieving authentic identity.
We set out again for McKissic House. I carried the book
bag, and Jumbo walked along reading Fosdicks best-seller. In
his hands, it looked no bigger than a match book.
In Tenkiller, mamad practically had to
drive a steam shovel into my bedroom in the mornings to chase
me out of bed and off to school. In Highbridge, though, I
loved the morning, especially the early morning. I got up before
Darius prowled through calling, Rise and shine! I woke
to some strange internal chime, and I moved. Maybe I just
wanted to scrub my face and pull on my clothes without
Jumbos spooky yellow eyes tracking the whole business.
Maybe I just wanted to escape the killer summer heat in the
brief moments before the milk wagons clattered.
Anyway, on the Tuesday morning of our road trip to
Opelika, I crept downstairs and smelled bacon frying, biscuits
baking, oranges set out to be halved and squoze. Kizzyd taken
over the kitchen already. With her spoons, whisks, and wood-stoked
ovens, she was scraping the last fresh edge off the
morning. A small price to paythe mean-as-a-rattler heat
would stick its fangs into us by ten or eleven anyway. I sat on a
stool next to Kizzys biscuit-making counter and claimed dibs
on the first biscuit out.
Dont jes set, Mister Danny. Kizzy mopped her forehead
with the back of one hand. Miss Giselle comes, you gon
find yosef to work mighty quick.
Phaugh. Kizzy liked me. Over the past weeks, wed become
good buddies. I helped her mornings, even before Darius
came in from the carriage house or Miss Giselle from the
bungalow. My dummyhood mayve played a part in our friendship
too. Kizzy used me as a tattletale-safe soundingboard. I
didnt echo. I absorbed.
With one flour-dusted oven mitt and a knotty black forearm,
Kizzy fetched her first biscuit tray out and banged it
down. Go on. Burn yo greedy fingers gifting it. I obeyed,
right down to getting burned, but juggling that first biscuit
made me happy. The sky hadnt even begun to redden, and I
had me an edible treasure.
Eat it fast n do the jooz, or Miss Giselles gon have yo
haid. Mine too. Kizzy bustled in her easy way.
I broke the biscuit into crumbly halves and dawdled over
it as long as I could, chewing and chewing.
You think Miss Giselles a hard woman with a tart
tongue. She do sometimes seem hard, but the mens in this
houseeven Darius, who can fill her with vinegar jes by walking
bythey done become her chirren. Shes like that nussry-rhyme
woman and her shoe. Dont know what to do, cep feed
em n boss em, to show how happy she is she got em.
Happy, I thought. Miss Giselle happy? She didnt much
act it. She acted like Mister JayMacd gone off to the employment
bureau and invited a dozen hungry people to come home
with him as guests.
Got no womb chirren, Kizzy said. Not having none,
being ever bairnless, it put her bitter. It slapt her ever-other-day
mean. Under that burden, you need to know how happy she is
for a houseful of ballplayers.
While Kizzy talked, I halved the oranges and ground
them on the fluted glass dunce cap of the juicer.
When Miss Giselle looks yall dagger eyes and snaps her
beak like a swamp tuttle, Kizzy said, it aint so much yall
shes mad at. Its things, things in genl. And it dont hep Mister
JayMac dont brim with husbandly loving-kindness like he
should. It dont hep none he sometimes
The outer porch door banged, and Kizzy cut off her spiel
like a butcher chopping the end off a butt roast. A good thing.
Miss Giselle herself swept in, her face on, her hair just so. A
looker in spite of crows feet, a rumpled cotton dress, her beat-up
work shoes.
Kizzy, you got any people in Detroit?
Mawning, maam, Kizzy said. How you feeling today?
You had some kin who took off north once. Where did
they eventually settle, Kizzy? Detroit?
Chicago, maam. Some in Philadelphia.
The coloreds in Detroit have all gone crazy. Radio says
its chaos there. A riot. Buildings and automobiles afire.
Mercy, but they aint any Lorrowses doing it, Kizzy
said, less its a bunch I never met up with.
Youd think this war would be enough mayhem for
anyone, Miss Giselle said. You wouldnt imagine people
would go out of their way to add to it with riots in their own
cities. How would you feel if a policeman told you your own
child was dead as a result? It must be terrible, learning a son in
uniform has lost his life. How much worse to discover the
bloodshed has occurred on American streets, at the hands of
people with whom your child had no quarrel.
Folks bout everwhere prone to quarrel, Kizzy said.
Miss Giselle cast an eye on Kizzy. As you are prone to
quarrel with me!
Nome. Breakfuss aint done yet.
Tell me why your peopleve gone crazy this way. A few
days ago it was Beaumont, Texas. Now its Detroit. Wherell it
be tomorrow? Have yall decided to work for Hitler and the
Japanese on the inside!
Maam, it aint my people, Kizzy said. Pars I know,
never been no insanity atall in us Lorrowses.
Miss Giselle paced between the sink cabinets and the
long center counter. Do you like working here, Kizzy?
I didnt, Id be gone. I got me my options.
Have you ever heard of the Eleanor Clubs? Do you
know what they are? Do you belong to one? Do you intend to
join one? Miss Giselle grabbed a halved orange and ran her
tongue around its inner peel. I wont fire you if you do. Or
taint your references. But I regard the Eleanor Clubs as a
treason on a par with the chaos taking place in Detroit.
When I got time to blong to a club? Kizzy said. Full
Gospel Holdiness Church bout my only one.
Youve never heard of the Eleanor Clubs?
Eleanor? Kizzy said. Mrs Roosevelt?
She may be the First Lady, but the rebellion she foments
among poor women of color deluded into thinking theyre
preyed upon by their bosseswell, that borders on apostasy.
Yessum, Kizzy said.
Do I prey upon you, Kizzy? Miss Giselle said. Do I
exploit you any worse than the great and wonderful Mr Jordan
McKissic does Yours Truly, his wife and galley slave?
I dont blong to no Eleanor Club, Miss Giselle. I dont
even like clubs. Most of ems got dues.
Or committees, Miss Giselle said. She stopped pacing.
She perched herself on the stool where Id eaten Kizzys first
biscuit of the morning. So Mrs Dittrichs girl Janet didnt
leave her at the urging of a local unit of the Eleanors?
Maam, Janets done gone to work fo Fomost Foge fo
twelve dollahs a week. Missus Dittrich guv her three.
Is everything in our life money? Money or sex? Whats
become of loyalty? devotion? faithfulness? Id like to know.
Dont know, Kizzy said, but peoples tell me its a free
country and trains run both ways.
Youdve thought Miss Giselle might have bristled at thata
remark so uppitybut she laughed. She got down from
the stool, tied on a smudged gingham apron, and pitched in
with the breakfast preparations. In the dining room, I laid the
table. As I did, I could hear her and Kizzy babbling away, more
like sisters than a hoity-toity employer and her downtrodden
cook.
I was back in the kitchen when Darius straggled in from
his apartment over the bus barn. He had an alarm clock out
there, an old metal bonger that rattled him awake at six or so.
But alarm clocksd grown scarce by mid 1943, so many folks
junked them during scrap drives and so few companies still
made them. Which was why Darius had become a roving human
alarm clock for McKissic Houses boarders.
Rise and shine, he mumbled, entering from the porch.
Flash them brushed-up ivories, folks. Sleepy banter, but a
kind of tucked-under grumbling too.
Miss Giselled treated Darius pretty well since wed been
back in Highbridge, but she turned on him now faster than a
rabid birddog. Ill have no more of your rackety wake-ups
around here, she said. I mean it, Darius. Im sick of the noise
and your idiot cheeriness.
I never meant em to be lullabyes.
Dont do it anymore.
Darius pulled in his chin. Wake the boarders up?
Go shouting through the house like a fishmonger. I hate
it. I wholeheartedly despise it.
Howd you like me to git everbody up?
Walk up the stairs. Knock on each door. Announce in a
low and civil tone that its nearly time to eat. Understand?
Yessum. Simple directions in simple English. Thatll do
it fo me awmost ever time.
Leave those biscuits alone! Miss Giselle snapped. And
never mind your piddling little ritual this morning. Mr Boles
here will do it for you today.
He can knock, maam, but he caint talk. Id be pleased
to truck upstairs with him to hep.
Then youll be damned before youre pleased, Darius. I
want you out of this house until Kizzy calls you back to eat.
For now, Mr Boles must do the best he can with his knuckles
and his youthful imagination. Out, please.
Darius left, head up. Kizzy kept mum.
The use I put my imagination to was climbing to the
third floor and waking Jumbo first. I scribbled him a note
about what Miss Giselle wanted me to do, and he lumbered
from room to room with me. Id knock, and hed say, Breakfast.
Rise and shine. Dont compel us to come in after you.
No one stayed too long in bed after hearing him say that.
At breakfast itself, Mister JayMac put in
an appearance. A show of solidarity with his players before a
big road trip to Opelika and LaGrange. He didnt sit at the
head or foot of the tableMuscles and Jumbo had those spotsbut
squoze in between Vito Mariani and me like any other
journeyman Bender.
Funny thing, thoughMiss Giselle did him the V.I.P.
honor of bringing him his own humongous platter, with three
cigarlike sausages, a steaming dipper scoop of cheese grits, and
a puffy cream-colored omelet, like the sort of pale-yellow cravat
youd rent from a tuxedo shop. At first I thought, Well, I
guess a guy can take this Im-just-a-regular-Joe stuff too far.
Except Mister JayMac scowled when his wife put the platter in
front of him, like he figured she meant to make him look baduppish
and scornfulwith such showboaty favoritism.
Whatd you put in this highfalutin aigg? he asked before
Miss Giselle could get back to the kitchen.
Ham, diced bell pepper, tomato, onions, a dash of tabasco
sauce. Miss Giselle cocked her head. Why?
The greens bell peppers?
It is. Did you think Id chopped the bitterest dandelion
stems I could find into it?
Nome, not really. Thing is, Darius dont much care for
bell peppers, honey.
Miss Giselle crossed her arms. But I made that for you,
Jay.
Well, who ast you to? I eat what the boys eat, you know
that. So take this masterpiece omelet to Darius. He can eat
around the pesky damned peppers.
Darius took breakfast at a junk counter on the screened-in
porchout of the kitchen, out of the dining room, out of
the way. He was out there now, finishing up.
He wont want it, Miss Giselle said. Hes already eaten
enough for three normal men.
Take it to him anyway. Let him decide. I cant abide
special treatment.
Well, I wont take it to him, Jay, for I cant abide abuse
or humiliation. And I wont abide them.
For the next few seconds, all anyone could hear was forks
scraping china and Muscles glugging back his juice.
This food cant go to waste, Mister JayMac finally said.
Take it to Darius.
Miss Giselle closed her eyes, hugged herself, and swayed,
like a grieving mama at a funeral. Her postureand her
sudden silencegave everybody an even bigger discomfort than
her and Mister JayMacs arguing had. So I pushed back my
chair, picked up the ritzy breakfast, and headed for the kitchen
with itmy stab at doing my blessed best as a peacemaker.
Behind me, I heard Jumbo say, Ill walk Miss Giselle
back to your house, sir.
You do that, Mister JayMac said.
On the screened porch, I set Mister JayMacs breakfast in
front of Darius, whod already eaten several biscuits and a
couple of fried sunny-side-uppers. He gave me a wary sidelong
look, but pulled the plate to him and dug in. Just then, Jumbo
ducked into view with Miss Giselle on his arm and Miss
Giselle in some sort of glassy-eyed trance.
An apt diversion, Jumbo told me. You cerebrate as
well off the field as on. He helped Miss Giselle down the
rickety porch steps and through the dewy victory garden to the
bungalow out back. They made an odd pair, those two. Of
course, Jumbo and anybody made a freakish twosome.
I slouched back to the dining room.
On the way to Opelika on Wednesday,
the Brown Bomber had a blowout, and Jumbo bruised his
thighs supporting the buss front bumper when the jack
slipped. We lost our game against the Orphans that night and
split with them in a doubleheader on the following day.
As we rolled into LaGrange on Friday, the air had a
silken, sluggish feel. Its taste, falling from a sky more dirty-cream
than blue, had a heavy rain tang. You dont forget that
taste, its dust-laying potential grabs you even at the crazy-making
height of a drought.
Bless it, Mister JayMac said, I dont want a rainout.
Sir, if we uz primed to lose again, itd be a blessing,
Fanning said. For everbody.
Mister JayMac whirled on him. If us losing tonight
would guarantee bumper crops, Id still rather win and swallow
the consequences than lose this one and wax fat!
Darius and a few of us others dragged suitcases and
duffels out of the Bombers luggage bins and passed them
around to the guys they belonged to. Some Hellbenders walked
to the houses of their host families. Others got picked up in
fancy cars and driven there.
Jumbo and I, like Mutt-and-Jeff drummers, hiked
through town to the Lafayette Hotel. The desk clerk wore a
white shirt and the kimono-swirled vest of a blackjack dealer.
He had an Army recruits haircut, though, and didnt at first
answer Jumbos questions about our reservations because wed
spooked him barging in. New there, he had a nellyboyish way
about him that mayve explained how hed sidestepped the
draft.
ClerVALL, he said finally, flipping through his book.
ClerVALL, -VALL, -VALL. Mmmmmm. Thats French, isnt
it?
With one -vall, it could be, Jumbo said. My father
hailed from Switzerland. The boom in his voice startled the
clerk crapless all over again.
Oh, yes, he managed. Yallre ballplayers. Hellbenders,
no less. Room 322. Mr Suiter has you down for three nights.
Key, please, Jumbo said.
Do you play when it rains? the clerk asked. Or is that,
ah, football?
Football, Jumbo said.
Then yall may get a rest this weekend. Stormsre comingtonight,
tomorrow, who knows? Swell view of Lafayette
Square from the third floor. Hope yall enjoy.
We trudged the stairs because the elevator didnt work.
Our room had two single beds, a chest of drawers with a metal
basin and a china pitcher on top of it, and ugly water-stained
wallpaper: chrysanthemums, over and over.
As per usual, Jumbo dragged a length of clothesline from
his suitcase and rigged a curtain out of it and the grass mat
hed also packed. Ouch. I thought wed built an iffy sort of
bond, a truce with doorways in it. For now, though, he didnt
draw the mat across its string.
Instead, he dumped his books onto the tufted bedspread
of the bed nearer the door, then lined the books by height
along the baseboard there. Hed finished On Being a Real Person
our first night in Opelika. Now, he eeny-meeny-minied his
books and wound up with Saroyans The Human Comedy. He
lowered himself to his bed, twanged the bedsprings getting
comfortable, and flapped the cover open.
Me, I lay down for a nap.
While Jumbo read, I felt the lonely afternoon grumbles
of thunder tremble my blood and tug at the horizons. I slept,
but the thunder seemed even closer than Jumbos raspy breathing,
proof Mister JayMacs dreaded rainout had marched to the
very edge of town.
Lets go. Jumbos hand shook me. I jarred awake,
muzzy and sweat-doused, thinking Id lain down in Tenkiller
and awakened to a loudspeaker broadcasting tornado news.
Jumbos yellow eyes bored a hole in my heart and dripped the
tough waxy fact of LaGrange into it. Home was far away.
Two hours before game time, Jumbo and I
suited up in the hotel and strolled to the ballpark in our street
shoes, our spikes slung around our necks like ice skates. Folks
boggled at us, but we ignored their boggling. Most knew a
Gendarme-Hellbender showdown loomed, and some recognized
Jumbo from last years games.
By the weekend of our first series with the Gendarmes,
every smart fan in the Chattahoochee Valley knew this years
flag belonged to Highbridge, LaGrange, or Opelika. Eufaula,
despite splitting a four-game series with us a week ago, had had
a rotten month. Now LaGrange and Opelika shared first place
with identical eighteen-and-thirteen records. We were a game
back, at seventeen and fourteen.
Nothing unusual about the tightness of the race or the
fever in the streetsbanners in store windows, rosin-potato
vendors in front of the stadium peddling spuds from iron
cauldrons black as pitch. One mand parked his jalopy pickup
out front, with a tailgate sign reading UN-BRELLAS50 Sents
and rifle stacks of umbrellasrough-carved handles, polka-dot
fabric panelsin its load bed.
Git you a un-brella! he yelled from the pickup. Git
ready for a Dixie dirtsoaker! Buy from me!
A guard let Jumbo and me in through a player gate, and
we walked to the visitors quarters. You felt like a hometowner
in that locker room, though. It had benches the color of ripe
wheat, spanking-new lockers, and shower fixtures as coppery
bright as new-minted pennies. No stale sweat smell. No
mildew or fust. (The toilet stalls had doors!)
Jumbo and I put on our spikes and finally wound up in
the outfield. A few early-bird fans gave us thumbs-down signs
and catcalled. Loosening up, I admired the clean dark-green
fence panels, the press box behind home plate, the light batteries
set around us like humongous electric sunflowers.
Jumbo and I played long toss, throwing pop-ups that
seemed ready to vanish into the blue at the heart of the
surrounding cloud attack. Thunder went on mumbling. Polka-dot
umbrellas sprouted around us like toadstools, the air smelled
moist, the temperature dropped into the low eighties.
Mister JayMac showed up a half hour before game time
and hit us infield.
Pray for a rainout! a fan shouted. You suckers!
Mister JayMac called all his starters in. He gave Little
Cuke Gordon, the head umpire, his lineup card. He told us to
come out swinging against Sundog Billy Wallacebecause If
you cannonade Sundog early, hell buckle.
Hes greatly chasable, Mister JayMac said. The longer
he hangs around, though, the guttier he feels. Youll have to
skin Satan to uproot him.
Unexpected trouble with the PA system, or scoreboard
crew, or something. Emmett Strock, the Gendarme manager,
came over to tell Mister JayMac it might be another twenty
minutes before Little Cuke could shout, Play ball! Would we
like to take a few more minutes of infield?
Criminy, Mister JayMac said. What a charade. Anybody
wants more warm-up time, hit the field!
Junior and I sprinted out. Curriden ambled over to third,
a papa dog behind his puppies. Dunnagin trotted to the plate
to catch in, and Darius, to the surprise of the whole crowd,
followed him over to rap out fungoes. Jumbo didnt take first,
though. He sent Sudikoff out and vanished into the dugout. I
figured he didnt feel too well himself, a result of Tuesdays
accident and a big dip in the barometer reading.
Even so, Junior and I gave the crowd an eyeful, pirouetting
around second, and Jumbos weird disappearance slipped
from our minds.
Five minutes to game time! Little Cuke Gordon
shouted to both benches. No more delays!
We trotted in. The Gendarmes trotted out. Jumbo wasnt
in our dugout, hed up and melted on us. If he didnt show up
before Wallace threw his first pitch, wed have to pinch hit for
him, losing him for the entire game. Mister JayMac grabbed
me and wrung my arm like a wet shirt sleeve.
Find Clerval. Hes batting fifth, so hurry!
I knew my way around the Prefecture about as well as I
did King Tuts tomb, and in that stadium, in my Highbridge
uniform, I felt about as welcome as a colored at a cross burning.
Jumbo wasnt in the locker room. I banged out into a
hallway leading to the concession stands and ticketstiles. I
spike-walked through these areas, but still no Jumbo.
The Gendarmes got their balky PA system workingif
itd ever balked. A voice like a woodwind reed began to
announce the starting lineups. Jiminy! What if I didnt make it
back before Wallace stepped to the rubber? Mister JayMacd
lose two prime players to the same damnfool wild-goose chase.
Behind a hotdog booth, I climbed a ladder towards the
top of the grandstands and the press box. Up there, Id be able
to scan every inch of the stadium. Climbing in spikes scared methey
kept slipping off or catching on the ladder rungsbut
I monkeyed up em as fast as I could. The evening sky opened
out, and the alleyway under me narrowed like a pit.
Once on the roof, an acre of salty gravel stuck in asphalt,
I didnt have to scan anything. Jumbo stood near the pole of
the central battery of lights. Behind him, thunderheads reared
against a pink wash of sky, like trout blood thinned in a basin
of water. Charged dust hung in the air, the streaks of hanging
dust like a battle line of angels. Take away the thunderheads,
though, and the dark hadnt begun to settle yet; meanwhile, the
breeze skating across the mock-beach of the roof carried on it
the smells of old bark and minty pigleaf.
Jumbo had his back to this wind, his hair lifted and flew.
Hed spread his arms, like an angel on the brink of soaring, or
like somebody crucified.
Somewhere, a groundskeeper yanked a switch.
All the lamps above Jumbo, eye after stinging eye, leapt
on. Facets. Dozens of facets. They mirror-blazed like the compound
eyes of a giant dragonfly. Brilliant. The blaze left me
with shivering mother-of-pearl oyster shells at the back of my
walloped eyeholes.
It seeped into me againsightin a slow-motion flash.
But, lordy, Jumbo: His eyes turned silver. Then copper. Then
gold. Then glassy amber, like a startled cats. His body jerked,
rejerked, and jitterbugged without a single motion of either
footlike hed convulsed from the knees up. His arms stiffened
and flopped, and did it again, the way a man in the chair
at Reidsville would twitch when our paid executioner got the
go-ahead and slapped him a scorching jolt.
Thunders cracked over the stadium. People gasped a long
Ooooooh, crooning their amaze over a fireworks show. Then,
whateverd happened to Jumbohis rooftop rechargingstopped
happening. It cycled itself through. It ended and let
him go, and Jumbo lurched a stagger step towards me. And
another. I wanted to scuttle crabwise back over the roof and
down. But I leaned into the wind, grabbed the front of Jumbos
shirt, and yanked him step by step to the ladder.
I waved Jumbo onto it. Its tubes shifted as soon as hed
climbed on. Him first, me second. Me going first wouldve
been too much like Jack rushing in terror down the beanstalk
ahead of the giant. What if Jumbo slipped? Falling, hed strip
me off too and ride me to a screaming marriage with the
concrete. So Jumbo went first, and I pecked along after him,
spiking his head softly every time he froze up.
Anyway, we made it down and clattered into our dugout
only moments before Little Cuke Gordon cried, Play ball,
dammit!
Mister JayMac had me leading off again, so I hurried to
set myself in the batters box, still juiced from my escapade and
stunned weak-kneed by the nearness of disqualification. Then
Sundog Billy did ego surgery on me with his major league
curve, striking me out on five pitches.
The stormwith all its rumblesome witcherydivided
and drifted in lightning-figured banks around the Prefecture.
Like the Red Sea parting. A miracle of sorts.
With that split storm chewing at the towns edges, Jumbo
played like a man on fire, his best game so far on this road trip:
a pair of solo shots and a two-bagger off the right-field wall.
But, Jumbos blasts aside, we blew that game and wound up
two full games behind the Gendarmes, with no report yet on
how Opelikad fared.
In the clubhouse, Mister JayMac said we had to win both
Saturdays and Sundays games. If we did, wed leave town tied
with the Gendarmes for first. If we split them, wed gain no
ground. And if we lost em both . . .
Me, I really had the blues. Despite everybody-but-Jumbos
dead bats, wed gone into the last half-inning locked at two all.
Then, with two outs and a chance at an extra at bat, Id
pumped a throw over Jumbo, sending three guys in the stands
bailing for cover. My error let Fat Boy Fortenberry, a pinch
hitter, score the winning run from second. Fortenberry! With his
love handles, basset-hound gait, and asthma wheeze.
Hoey came over to console me: Couldnt cut the mustard, could
you, Dumbo? Shows what youre really made ofTwinkie filling.
I shucked my gear and ducked into the shower room.
Jumbo scrammed, and no one under the spigots said Boo! to
me. As I dressed, the only guys to say, Dont worry bout it,
youll pop em tomorrow, were Knowles and Dunnagin.
Dunnagin gripped my shoulder as I buttoned my shirt.
If wed put a few runs up, one flubbed throw wouldntve
meant nada. This bunch still owes you. Boot away five or six
more, and Hoey might have a case.
I footed it alone from the stadium to the Lafayette. The
storms thatd missed the city had regrouped. You heard them
bellyaching above the copses of magnolias and yaupon holly
southwest of the ballpark. Sheet and candle-wick lightning
flickered on the diamond-cut tops of those trees. Snaky cloud
tentacles reached into the sky over LaGrange and fanned long
fringes of blackness into the gaps behind them.
Even before Id turned onto the square facing our hotel,
itd begun to rain. It bucketed down.
Upstairs in room 322, Jumbo sprawled on the floor,
doing Army-style crossover toe touches. The room had a thin
carpet, and it and every other piece of fiber near him, including
the mat hed strung, reeked with his body odor. Why the
exercise? Hed just played every inning of a killer game.
Jumbo nodded at me, but kept working. Im discharging
an excess of energy. Otherwise, I wont be able to sleep. Then
he stopped. Youre drenched, Daniel.
I sneezed. Outside, heavens waterworks emptied into the
gutters. I shed my clothes, dried myself, and wrapped a bed
sheet around me. I took down the grass mat dividing our room,
rolled it up, slid it under Jumbos bed, and flopped down on
my own. I faced away, clenching like a rolypoly. For the first
time since Tenkiller, I shivered with cold, not fear.
Jumbo didnt say anything. After a while, he got up and
shuffled down the hall to the mens bath. When he returned,
he shut the light and lay down on the other bedwithout a
word, but also without trying to hang his curtain again.
The rain hung on all that night and
all the next day, but bad weather didnt much bug Jumbo. He
had his books and took a reminiscing kind of pleasure in the
storm. Me, I wanted to ask the Lafayettes other guests to join
me in breaking up our room furniture. The nearer game time
drew on the harder the drilling rain fell. Jumbo and I peered
into Lafayette Square from our third-story lookout. The elms,
the azaleas, and the statue of the squares namesake seemed on
the verge of melting into the Piedmont aquifer.
At four oclock, a desk clerknot the one whod signed
us inbrought word of the games cancellation. Mister
JayMac had signed the message. Hed added we should eat
well, hoard our strength, and get ready for two games on Sunday.
Never mind Mister JayMacs instructions. Jumbo didnt
eat or sleep. He looked out the window, paced, or read. Between
four-thirty and five, I took a nap, a nap clabbered with
war dreams (insects stinging; bullets snapping past), dreams
born of the rains fizz and snap. When I woke, Jumbo said,
Hello, and held up a booknot The Human Comedy, or It Is
Later Than You Think, but the Harry Emerson Fosdick hed finished
reading in Opelika.
Listen, he said: A constructive faith is the supreme
organizer of life, and, lacking it, like Humpty-Dumpty we fall
and break to pieces, and the wonder is
I sat up the better to hear him read.
and the wonder is whether all the kings horses and
all the kings men can ever put us together again.
Jumbos lemon-drop eyeballs rolled up into his forehead, leaving his
sockets empty-windowed and spooksome. Blank of eye, he said,
Neither a king nor his horsemen first put us together. We
should hardly expect them to reassemble us when the world has
destroyed us. His eyes clicked back. If only theyd seemed to
belong to him, their reappearance might have steadied me.
They didnt, though, and if not for the clattering downpour and
the shaming sadness of Jumbos words, Idve bolted.
Perhaps Ill take more pleasure in Mr Smiths Life in a
Putty Knife Factory, Jumbo said. He reached over (the galoot had
tove been double-, maybe triple-jointed) and chose another
title from his row of books. Just as hed thumbed the book
open, there came a rapping at our door: Tap, tappa, tap tap; tap tap.
You know, Shave and a haircut, two bits.
YES? Jumbo boomed.
That gave the knocker a start. Uh . . . Western Union.
YES? Jumbo boomed again.
Delivery for, uh, ah, it says here, Mr Daniel Boles,
shortstop of the Highbridge Hellbenders.
I hunched my neck. Id never had a Western Union delivery in my life.
Maybe its the bigs, Daniel, Jumbo said. Maybe Mr
Cox of the Phillies has had his scouts observing you.
Then those scoutsd seen me throw away last nights
game. Jumbod go up before me, even with his drag-ass base-running.
WHOM IS THE MESSAGE FROM? Jumbo said.
Mrs Laurel Boles, the messenger in the hall said, of,
uh, cripes, I dont know, somewhere in Oklahoma.
Jumbo lifted an eyebrow. Your mother, Daniel?
Id already started for the door. Mama wrote, but never
telephoned or sent packagesshe was too frugal.
The joe in the hall didnt look like a Western Union guy.
In fact, it was the clerk whod checked us in. I reached for my
delivery, whatever it was.
Not so fast, he said, a hand behind his back. The other
clutched a sheet of onion-skin paper, which he lifted to chest
level. I must read this to youa singing telegram that isnt
sung. He read it in a snotty sing-song, though:
My dear darling Daniel,
My dear dummy child,
When out in your flannels,
Dont throw it wild.
I like the ball white, son.
Why did you soil it?
What theBenders had won,
You flushed down the toilet.
Your shame like your words, lad,
Must stick in your throat.
So to cuddle at night, kid,
Youve got . . . MY GOAT!
Here the clerk pulled a stuffed toy goat, with a furry chin
beard, from behind his back and thrust it at me.
Telegrams signed, Laurel Boles, your loving mother,
the clerk said. Evening. And before Jumbo could ask him
whod put him up to such a crappy stunt, he tossed his message
down and scrammed. I turned and flung that goat at the wall.
It burst a belly seam and spilled some stuffing. One of its
horns twiddled out of true and flopped like a bird dogs ear.
I walked to the window, grabbed the curtains, and began
to cry like the rain. Jumbo stepped off his bed, with a rustle of
ticking and a drum-brush creak of the springs, and towered at
my back. He had no more notion what to do or say than I did.
All I knew was, my .432 batting average and my prestidigitation
at shortstop didnt amount to a phony two-bit piece if I
was homesick and crammed to my eyeteeth with fury. So
Jumbo did something to distract me. He turned me around.
Turkey Sloan, he said. Turkey Sloan probably wrote
the ditty read to us by that . . . by that shitass impersonator
of a Western Union man. Who helped Sloan?
Buck Hoey, I thought, my comforter in the locker room.
Buck Hoey, Jumbo guessed. Evans, Sosebee, and
Sudikoff: malcontents, troublemakers.
Id known Hoey was my enemy, but it despunked me to
hear a whole list of fellas who wanted to tire-iron me.
Jumbo read this news in my eyes. Laugh at them. Laugh
with them. Their playfulnesshe nodded at the poem
may ride on spite, but it yet remains playfulness. He picked
up and looked at the poem. This has some crude wit, Daniel.
He handed it to me.
I read it twice, memorizing it against my will, then tore it
into confetti and hurled the pieces at Jumbo. He blinked in the
face of my conniption, as one scalelike flake landed on and
hung from his eyelid.
Daniel, he said. Daniel.
He mayve meant to calm me, or to chide, but the weirdness
of my name on his lips, the puzzle of what it told, lifted
my hackles the way the stadium lights had cable-jumped him. I
could feel my skin glowing. I reached down and picked up the
stuffed goat thatd bounced off the wall. Hissing, I got my
fingers into its split seam and gutted it. I popped its eye
buttons, dehorned it, twisted its tail off, mangle-snapped its
legs. Stuffing flew around us like the insulation blown from an
attic when a devil winds sprung its roof. Anyway, Sloan and
Hoeys goat lay here and there in pieces, although I still had its
whitish silver pelt in my hands. I knelt on the floor, gasping
and hammering my fist.
Jumbo pinched my shoulders and drew me to my feet.
His hands fumbled at my shirt, setting it straight, giving me an
Army gig line.
Lets talk to that unprincipled clerk. I let him guide me
through the door and down the stairs. At the registration desk,
the clerk sat listening to a radio. When he saw Jumbo and me
marching towards him, his face seemed to pull across his cheekbones;
he looked embalmed and rouged. He clicked off the
radio like a man caught lollygagging.
Who hired you to play a Western Union man? Jumbo
asked.
Thats private information. The clerk squirmed.
No law protects mischief makers. Your allegiance has a
vile monetary cast.
Loyalty to those who pay you isnt a crime. Usually, its
what they pay you for.
To how many buyers do you extend your loyalty?
Thats no business of yours either. Squirming more.
But if I paid you for it, it could be, yes? Jumbo closed
the Lafayettes counter book and leaned over it on one muscular
forearm. YES?
The clerk pulled back. Whatd you have in mind?
NOTHING!!! Jumbo boomed. We know who paid
you. Why should we bribe you for information already in our
possession?
Bribe me? Listen
LaGrange has a movie theater? Jumbo cut him off in
the shank of his huff. We need the diversion of a film.
A movie theater? The clerk was confused.
I know your city supports at least one.
We have three. The Roxys nearest, just down the street.
When does its next feature presentation begin?
Seven thirty, the clerk said, and Jumbo turned me
towards the Lafayettes revolving door. But its Saturday, right?
The fourth Saturday of the month?
Yes, Jumbo said.
Then yall cant go there tonight. You wouldnt want to.
I beg your pardon.
Fourth Saturday of the month. Its nigger night at the
Roxy, placell be crawling with em.
I beg your pardon.
Well, the rain could hold a few of em out. But its finally
stoppinghe nodded at the lobbys only windowand
youd have to declare martial law to keep em out after a day as
dull as this un. Why dont yall try the Cairo or the Pastime?
They have colored-only balconies, but yall wouldnt run slam
into the foppery of nigger night.
My profoundest secretJumbo leaned into the clerks
faceis that I am an honorary nigger.
A what?
And Daniel, whom others paid you to mock, cares less
for his seatmates color than for the quality of the film.
Okay. The clerk produced a copy of the LaGrange Daily
News. At the Cairo, Reveille with Beverly. At the Pastime, a
Mickey Rooney thing. At the Roxy, a triple bill yall wouldnt
care to
Hush, Jumbo said.
Yessir, the clerk said.
And after a quick bite to eat in the nearby Magnolia
Café, Jumbo and I hit the sidewalk, not in a downpour but a
tingly drizzle, and walked through the early twilight to the
Roxy for a triple feature of some sort.
It was nigger night at the Roxy for
sure. Even the rain couldnt spoil these folks Saturday
evening. Theyd turned out in chattering, straggle-in mobs.
Groups of them clogged the sidewalk under the marquee
and stretched around the corner from the box-office window.
One double file hugged the Roxys brick wall in a futile
effort to keep the drizzle from beading their hair or soaking
their out-for-fun finery. They couldnt go to the ballpark to
watch their Gendarmes bruise the Hellbenders again, but they
could catch a delicious scream festthree classic chillers for
the price of onehere at the Roxy. The storm had no power
to chain them in their mill houses.
The Roxyd thrown LaGranges coloredsand any other
soul open-minded enough to wait for a ticketa horror festival.
The marquee told the story:
FRANKENSTEIN
BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN
SON OF FRANKENSTEIN
* * *
Boris Karloff as the Bogeyman to End All Bogeymen
When Jumbo saw the marquee and realized what hed let
himself in for, he had second thoughts. He mumbled something
kindly about Reveille with Beverly. But I wanted this triple
feature. Id never seen a one of these films (even though Id
read Mary Shelleys Frankenstein in high school), and I hoped the
films would shear my mind away from dumbass thoughts of
getting back at Hoey and his pals.
We finally reached the ticket window, and I handed in my
money. Jumbo pushed up right behind me.
If you havent already seen Frankenstein, he said,
you may find it a . . . a primitive dramatic vehicle.
Did he want to talk me out of seeing it? The white girl in
the booth, with her hair in a kind of mesh orioles nest, said,
Ticket money, sir. Jumbo paid her and shoved behind me
into the salty popcorn smells of the lobby.
In its crush, he said, Bride of Frankenstein surpasses in
quality the film to which it is the sequel, and Son of Frankenstein
features Karloffs last essayal of the role that made him famous
and a good performance by Bela Lugosi as Ygor. Should we
stay for all three, however, well violate curfew.
Jumbo stood out like an ostrich in a parade of penguins.
His whisper boomed above even the feisty talk of those black
folks, and some of them looked at him like hed arrived aboard
an ambulance.
At the refreshment stand, I nodded at the Coca-Cola
toggle and the glassed-in popcorn popper next to it. Soon as I
had my stuff, Jumbo marched me towards the screening room.
The seats thered begun to fill. Folks surged through the lobby
and into the auditorium. We slipped in at the back, after two
thirds of the crowdd already gone in, and found seats against
the rear wall, under the projection booth. Bodies crammed
every nook, teenagers eeled up and down the aisles searching
for friends or showing themselves off, and the hoots and cat-calls
didnt fade away until the house lightsd dimmed.
The curtains over the screen, the royal-purple one and the
see-through job behind it, purred aside. Coming attractions,
newsreels (mostly war stuff), and a Popeye cartoon that prodded
the crowd to talk-back applause.
Then Frankenstein, with an opening sceneLatin mumblings,
peasant faces in a cemeterythat really did slap a chill
on everyones high spirits. Except for the projector purr and
the films sound track, all you could hear now were creaking
seats, nervous titters, and coughs. Bodies dug up, hanged murderers
cut down, the theft of an ABNORMAL brain by the
doctors stupid helper. Halfway along, the crowdd really gotten
into it. Squeals, shrieks, laughter. Some folks stood up to
yell at or plead with the actors on screen.
Come on now, a man told the monster, you dont
want to do that. Uh-uh. Gon bring you nuthin but misery.
Vile! somebody else said. He so vile!
Lawd, caint you see he didnt mean it?
Naw, naw, naw. Go back! Go back!
The longer I sat there the queerer I began to feel. I kept
sneaking peaks at Jumbo, who sat rigor-mortis still. He didnt
much favor Karloff playing Dr Frankensteins critter, or else
Karloff s goose-stepping monster didnt exactly favor Jumbo,
but youdve had to be blind not to see a likenessthe lumpish
blocks of their heads, the bearishness of their bodies. Still,
Jumbo had a suppleness lacking in the other, a sad lopsided
quirk of face that made Karloff s monster look regular, even
handsome, by comparison. There was a mechanical, a robotlike,
quality to the screen thing Jumbo didnt have. He sometimes
lumbered and wrenched, but when he did, it was more like a
hurt beast than a broken robot. Anyway, Jumbos resemblance
to the made-up Karloff didnt scare meit embarrassed me into a
fever. Even the Roxys iceberg air didnt help. How
must Jumbo feel, towering there marble hard as the Lincoln
memorial, hands clutched like gauntlets to his knees?
He mustve had an inkling half the people there, including
his own roomy, d already compared him in their minds to
the bogeyman on screen. And the inkling could have come
from a lifetime of overheard slurs and otherwise hard-to-account-for
snubbings. I knew such stuff myself.
Three quarters or more through it, I dropped the thread
of Frankenstein. It had no music score, and every little gasp or
cushion creakwhen folks werent sassing the Karloff monster
or arguing amongst themselvesslammed me back to the
iceberg there-and-then and the sting of my own embarrassment.
Lots of scenes limped along on talk.
But near the end, when the villagers torched the old mill
and the monster appeared to burn with it, I found the thread
again. I forgot about Jumbo and watched. A respectfulness like
awe fixed the audience in a hurricane light, centering us in the
hush of its eye. Pity for the monster, and relief it wouldnt
rampage again in this picture, and dread in knowing that, like
Christ in a bad suit, it would rise again. To take a wife. The
sequel was already spooled.
Lets go. For the first time since wed claimed our seats,
Jumbo tried to get up. I put both hands on his chest and held
him in it. The clock on the square hadnt chimed nine yet. Even Jumbo
couldnt be that keen on Life in a Putty-Knife Factory.
Groaning, he sank back.
During intermission, folks headed for the lobby to stock
up on jujube beads, soda, chewing gum. With the houselights
on, they saw Jumbos head lolling against the back wall, his eyes
squinting like a big iguanas. They slowed to ogle him or sped
up to get past quick.
Whispers and nudgings cycloned around us, and two or
three more seats in our area wound up empty.
S a publicity gimmick, somebody said.
S a wounded sojer, home from the war.
Naw, its that Hellbender first baseman who poked him
a coupla long uns lass night.
Ugh. Somebody done beat him silly with a ugly stick.
The houselights blinked, signaling the second show.
Fewer people came back in, and the empty seats around us
multiplied. Jumbo slid down and down, like he hoped to disappear
into the spilled Coke gleaming on the floor like gummy
blood.
Bride of Frankenstein began with its loud rum-ta-ta-tum-tum
scoremusic-box tinklings during the opening with Mary
Shelley and the bozos made up like Byron and Percy, and mad
flourishes every time the monster staggered on or Colin Clive
as Dr F. had another headache. By the time Clive got Elsa
Lanchester, with her Harpo Marx hairdo, jump-started,
Jumbos head was no higher over his seat back than mine was
over mine. His knees rose out of the chop of the Franz Waxmans
score like islands. It hurt to see him cramped, but with
its cockeyed sets and its skinny Dr Praetorius, this movie had
its points. How could I leave until the whole silly showd
unsprocketed?
Bride ended. The houselights came up again. A moviegoer
on his way to the lobby stopped and pointed a shaky finger at
Jumbo. You dont blong here. Yore a demon from the crypts
and gallows. The man reeked of a bad peach wine. Begone,
Satan, you damn viper!
Shhh, somebody said.
Dont yall shush me. This man aint a man, he a debil,
got him a snake for a tail.
Ol man, you drunk! Ol man, you a fool!
Hes a white debil. Dont blong here, dont blong noeres
but hell, He looked back at Jumbo. Begone, you damn viper!
Two white high school boys seized the man and frog-marched
him out of the theater. Jumbo hugged himself and
stared up at the star-sprinkled ceiling. One of the kid bouncers
came back and peered down the row at him.
Sorry bout that, sir. You awright?
Sticks and stones, Jumbo said.
We screen for carriers, but some of these jigsre jes lousy
boozehounds. He saluted. Enjoy the last show, sir.
What time is it?
The bouncer shot his cuff to check his watch, an old one
with a radium-painted dial.
Ten-twenty, he said. Zat awright? (Did he plan to
have the Roxy dragged by tractor into another time zone if the
hour didnt suit us?)
Thank you, Jumbo said, and the kid left. Daniel, Mister
JayMacs curfew
The houselights dimmed again. The opening credits for Son of
Frankenstein began to roll. I put my hand on Jumbos armhumor
me a little longer, I was begging him.
Next to and in front of us, more empty seats. Only three
other people still sat on our row.
Basil Rathbone played Wolfgang Frankenstein, son of the
maker of the first pictures monster. In one scene, Lugosi as
Ygor took Rathbone to the monsters sleeping body.
Cannot be destroyed. Cannot die. Your father made him live for
always, Ygor said. Now hes sick. . . .
Jumbo moaned.
You mean to imply that that is my brother? Rathbone asked as
they stood over Karloff in his sheepskin vest.
But his mother was lightning, Lugosi said.
Jumbos knees thumped the seat back in front of him. He
struggled up like a gorilla trying to burst a steamer crate.
Whatve these celluloid nightmares to do with you? he
boomed at everyone whod cranked around to look at him.
Can that yammering! somebody shouted back.
One more damn drunk, somebody else said. A black
un and a white un, bofe trouble.
The ushers showed up againstartled to find Jumbo, a
giant shadow with his head just below the projector window, at
the center of the commotion, railing at the film on screen and
the blameless folks whod paid their hard-got money to see it. I
tried to lever Jumbo back down.
Fie on these blood wallows! he shouted. These hymns
to corruption! My patience exhausts itself!
The ushers exchanged a look. Whod move first to give
him the old heave-ho? Thank God, Jumbo hadnt gone off on
an all-out woozy tear yet. He saw the worried boys.
No need to oust me bodily, he told them. My friend
and I are leaving.
Good riddance, somebody several rows up said. Sho
hope we can git on wi our blood waller in peace.
Jumbo edged aislewards, pulling me with him and apologizing
to anyone near enough to hear. A third of the remaining
audience clapped when he opened the door to the lobby. That
hurt him. Through two whole films, hed behaved himself. Not
until a drunkd called him a damn ol viper, not until the
pressure of Mister JayMacs curfew began niggling him, and
not until a slew of scenes into the third movie had he stood up
to protest the mayhem and the morbid stuff.
Now his fellow moviegoerssome of em, anywayapplauded
his exit. The unfairness of that slapped him like a
gas-soaked rag. Out in the lobby, I watched shock and hurt
ripple over his face in frame-by-frame waves. Rage shook him.
He let go of me and turned back towards the theaterto tear
out a seat by its floor bolts and hurl it with a roar into the
crowd?
Hes completely superhuman! Wolf Frankenstein would
say. The entire structure of the blood is quite different from that
of a normal human being!
Come on, one of the ushers said. You dont wanna let
a bunch of niggers git under your skin.
You do, theyll shore change its color for you, the other
usher said. And both ushers laughed.
Jumbos rage drained away. He didnt rip up a seat. He
growled and swung his arm at everyone in a tired wave. He left
the hall again and paced the foyer, where the coming-attraction
posters shone in glass boxes.
Together we walked through the muggy air to our hotel.
Jumbo stooped as he slouched, but his size still suggested
Karloffs killer hobgoblin. On my first day in Highbridge, Id
figured him for a giant in coveralls. Now, shook up by three
movies and the superstitious venom of a wino, I wondered if he
was even human.
Back in our room, I went to bed under his chilly stare, but
tonight it seemed one more penalty, along with Sloans fake
telegram and Hoeys stuffed goat, for throwing away the first
game of our first series against the Gendarmes.
I couldnt sleep. From the creakings of his bedsprings and
his moans, I assumed Jumbo couldnt either. Hed said nothing
on our walk back from the Roxy and nothing since wed settled
in. A fly on the wall wouldve had a devil of a time figuring out
which of us was the dummy. Id stopped believing that he
might strangle me in my bed, but I hated thinking that at the
Roxys triple bill wed become unmoored from each other,
shoved apart like two boats on a vast, poisoned lake.
Jumbo made a noise like a cow getting sidetracked in the
middle of a low and ending with a snork. I rolled over and
switched on my bedside lamp. Shadows leapt onto the walls.
Jumbod heard me, but he lay facing away, a one-man mountain
range. I got out of bed and found my message notebook. With
a pencil I printed out a question, two questions, three:
Where are you from? Really?
Do you have any living kin?
Did you ever have an accident that caused you to look the way you do
now?
I took the notebook around Jumbos bed and held it so
he could read my questions, which he did. Still lying on his
side, he crooked his finger for my pencil and notebook, took
them from me, and printed:
Too many places to list.
No.
Only my birth.
He gave the notebook back to me and closed his eyes. I
sat down on my bed and read his answers over and over again,
like hed written them in an alphabet with hundreds and hundreds of
meanings in every letter. Too many places to list, No, and Only my
birth, I figured, put into code his whole mysterious
biography. Why had he put birth in quotation marks? After our
evening together, I was afraid I knew.
Mister JayMac dropped by our room at
eight the next morning to tell us the Gendarmes owner, Mr
John Sayigh, wanted to play a doubleheader that afternoon to
make up for yesterdays rainout. The weather reportsunny
with high cumuluspromised us a shot at it.
What of the field? Jumbo asked.
The groundskeepers got a tarp over the infield on Friday
night. Outfields pretty scjuishy, though, and itll take some
doing to firm up some spots where the tarp didnt do its job.
Mr Sayigh suggests volunteers from both our clubs show up at
the park within the next hour or so to tackle the drying-out.
Yessir.
Begging your pardons, but both you fellas look like you
could use some drying out too. Didnt go honky-tonking last
night, did you? A little arm-wrasslin with John Barleycorn?
We went to a movie, Jumbo said.
Three movies, I thought.
Mister JayMac turned to me. Didnt you sleep? You
look about as peaked as Ive ever seen you.
Hell look swell after some labor on Mr Sayighs field,
Jumbo said.
Let me stress, said Mister JayMac, frown lines between
his eyes, that neither Mr Sayigh nor I expect anyone to work
whod rather idle the morning away or go to worship services.
In fact, if you dont want to assist with field repairs, Id like yall
to come with me to church.
Well assist, Jumbo said.
All right. If everything goes well, todays opener will
start at two. The Gendarmes front office plans to announce
the time over the radio and pass out flyers to folks leaving
church. I expect a good crowd.
Yessir, Jumbo said.
I found the empty hide of the stuffed goat the desk
clerkd brought me yesterday and handed it to Mister JayMac.
Whats this? he said.
A toy, Jumbo said. Please return it to Mr Hoey, who
must have sent it to our room in an unfortunate mix-up.
Looks a little the worse for wear, Mister JayMac said.
It did. That goat was dishrag-limp. Mister JayMac turned the
empty skin over in his hands and said good-bye. I halted him
again and gave him the goats picked-off eye buttons. Mister
JayMac wrinkled his forehead and left.
Jumbo and I suited out in our flannels, splurged on a taxi,
and rode to the Prefecture. True to Mister JayMacs word, a
half dozen groundskeepersd beaten us to the task. With rakes,
brooms, zinc buckets, wooden drags, and burlap bags of sand
or sawdust, they struggled to repair the field. Jumbo and I went
to work with three other HellbendersDunnagin, Knowles,
and Sudikoffand maybe ten of the Gendarmes. Most of the
guys treated this shit detail as a party, cracking wise and singing
in rounds. It went okay.
Nowadays, youve got beaucoups of ways to dry out a
field. You can sprinkle this more or less new-fangled chemical
product called Diamond Dry around and let it absorb the
water. You can vacuum up standing puddles with a machine.
Or pour gasoline on the wet spots, flip a match in, and boil
some of the moisture away. (Course, you can also burn down
your ballpark.) Hell, nowadays you can hire a helicopter to
hover over the swamp like a flying blow-dryer.
Back then, though, nobodyd heard of Diamond Dry or
outdoor vacuums. Because of rationing and the hazard to your
stands, no one wouldve thought of using gasoline. Helicopters?
Ha! Not until 39 did Sikorskyfirst name, Igormake
one of those ungainly contraptions fly.
So you used other methods. You helped your grounds-keepers
by wielding brooms to spread the water out, by forming
bucket brigades to scoop it up and dump it elswhere, and
by digging runoff trenches. That Sunday morning, some of us
swept, some of us bailed, some of us scattered sawdust or hay
around. By noon, Jumbo and Id burnt our energy reserves
down to fumes, but our labors guaranteed a game or two that
afternoon, and the wives of some of the Gendarme players
brought us a covered-dish dinner. Jumbo ate for the first time
since his rooftop juicing on Friday night: creamed sweet corn,
snap beans, yellow-squash casserole, tomato slices, popcorn
okra, and creamed potatoes. The food was lukewarm, the
womend toted it so far, but it tasted like manna to me, even
the meat dishes Jumbo wouldnt let himself touch.
That afternoon, our restoking didnt seem to help that
muchnot at first, anyway. Jumbo and I played like kittens
overdosed on catnip. Ordinarily, Mariani pitched like a street
fighter, nicking the edges of home plate, stalking around the
mound with his teeth gritted and his eyes afire, throwing heat
when the batter expected finesse, and vice versa. None of these
tactics worked for Mariani in the opener. The Gendarmes
boarded him like fleas on a long-haired spaniel, then roughed
up Parris and Hay in relief roles. We lost the opener, six to
two, and fell two games behind LaGrange. Another lossd
shake us hard. It could take two weeks, even a full month, to
regain the ground wed given up, if we could regain it at all.
Gendarme fans, especially the coloreds in the outfield
bleachers, carried on like their boysd already snatched the
CVL pennant out of Mister JayMacs pocket. I felt sure that
some of the raucous crew at last nights monster flicks were
tap-dancing and thigh-slapping out there.
In the dugout between games, Hoey sidled up and sat
down next to me. He popped me with some sort of rag, then
dropped it over my thigh and leaned back.
Hear you got a telegram from Mama yesterday.
The rag on my thigh was the toy goat Id gutted.
Hearing from Mama didnt inspire you to new heights
of glory on the ball field today, Dumbo.
I flipped the fake goat skin out onto the infield grass.
Looky thereflies almost as well as your namesake,
dont it? Hoey squeezed my knee. Maybe Mamas words
werent meant to inspire, maybe they were meant to
sting.
Lay off the boy, Double Dunnagin said.
Hoey ignored him. You were a regular sojer boy up at
the plate in that last one.
If I hadnt gone aught for three, with a deliberate walk in
the eighth to load the bases and set up a rally-killing double
play, I mightve figured his remark for praise. What it meant
was, Id stood in the batters box like a soldier at attention,
never taking my bat off my shoulder. It never crossed Hoeys
mindor Sloans, or Evanss, or Sosebeeshe and his
wiseacre chums had slid a banana peel under my confidence.
Mister JayMac came into the dugout. This games do or
die. And I dont expect Darius to drive a load of stiffs back to
Highbridge. Yall follow?
Yessir, four or five guys more or less mumbled.
In the debacle jes past, Mister JayMac said, yall played
worse n I ever thought you could. Play up to your potential,
not down to your shortcomings, and well escape with our
limbs intact and our hopes alive. Need I say more?
NOSIR! most of the team shouted.
All right. Im deferring here and now to Darius, who has
some interesting intelligence for you.
Nother nigger nugget, Fadeaway told Sosebee. Mister
JayMac didnt hear. Otherwise, Fadeaway wouldve spent the
evening hand-washing our jocks.
Gundys pitching this game, Darius told us, sitting on
the dugout ledge with his hands hanging between his legs like
dark plumb bobs. He avoided eye contact. Ive seen him pitch
befo, and Ive watched his warm-ups.
Where, I suddenly wondered, had Darius spent the night?
In the Brown Bomber? At a cousins or an in-laws somewhere
in or around LaGrange? I couldntve told you.
Gundy tips his curve, Darius said.
Tips it? Sloan said. My, my. Usually, youve got to be
in the batters box to tip one. Gundy must be faster than the
word God to tip one of his own pitches.
Mr Sloan, thats enough, Mister JayMac said.
Gundy telegraphs his curve. Darius looked Sloan in the
eye, and Sloan started picking lint off his sleeve. Hell thow
you a fastball, a change, or a knuckler out of his gloveever
time, no surprises. You got to figure which it is as its riding in.
I caint hep you there. But if you caint tell a knucklers
dip-dip-shimmy-shimmy from a fastballs straight-in zip, theys eye
doctors you should visit.
Unless youre a pitcher, Hoey said. Nothing scares a
hitter worse than a half-blind moundsman.
Darius smiled. True nough. But Gundys curve, nowhes
gon tip you to it sho as sunrise, gon take the ball to a place
back of and under his right butt cheek and twiddle it there till
hes got his grip. If Gundy drops his ball hand behind him,
yallre gon see a curveever time.
That could be a ruse, Nutter said. When he goes back
to his glove for the windup, he could regrip. A hitter thinking
curve and lunging at something else would look a fool.
Mr Nutter, youve been to the bigs, Darius said. You
know sech things. Gundy aint been up and most prolly never
gon to be. In this business, hes as perdictable as a hell-fire
sermon, and nobody on the Darmes, not even Mr Strock, yet
had the sense to cotch him out on it n jerk him straight.
Anything else, Darius, Mister JayMac said.
Nosir. Important thing is, study where his ball hand
goes fo he winds, then cat-pounce any curve in the zone. He
slipped off the dugout ledge and glided away.
If any other CVL team had had a colored scout, management
wouldve milked him of his skinny and passed it on
without telling where itd come from. Mister JayMac took
another tack, whether from social conscience or from some
sort of weird snag Darius had him in, I couldnt say just then.
Fadeaway pitched the second game. He blanked the Gendarmes
through six, using a fadeaway and a perky fastball to
bumfuzzle Mr Strocks gang and keep the homies solemn as a
surgeon at a recent patients burial. Meanwhile, the rest of us
teed off on Gundys telegraphed curve. We also managed to
decipher most of his other pitches before they reached the
plate.
Gundy, shell-shocked to near zombiehood after less than
four innings, trudged to the showers to a concert of boos. We
picked up on his reliever where wed finished with Gundy, the
rhythm of hitting in us like a boogie-woogie tune, the Darmes
dashed hopesfor a sweepmaking them more stumblebummish
the longer the game went on.
Even the run they got in the seventh, a rain-bringing Ed
Bantling pop-up the wind pushed into the right-field stands,
didnt set them afire. His homer struck even Bantling as flukish.
He trotted to second backwards, watching the ball rise and
rise, in unreal stages, like a Ping-Pong ball on an air-hose jet,
until it finally stopped bounding higher and fell on a sudden
slant into the bleachers. As he crossed the plate, Banding had
begun to laugh, but more like a soldier whos barely escaped a
bullet than one whos just lobbed a mortar right on the enemy.
And for good reason too. We beat LaGrange thirteen to
one and saved ourselves the embarrassment of going home on a
losing streak.
Jumbo and I spent one more night in the
Lafayette Hotel. He slept like a dead man, hardly breathing or
moving. Despite my bad night the night before, the days
excitementalong with a nagging fidgetiness about those three
Karloff flickshad me keyed so tight I couldnt unwind. I
flopped around like an epileptic, then got up and paced, and
mentally replayed every inning of Sundays second game.
Well, why not? My play in that game qualified as one of
my best performances yet. No errors, an unassisted double
play, and five hits in six plate appearances, with a double down
the line, and four runs scored. Hoey hadnt congratulated me,
though. Hed spent the afternoon either riding the bench or
squatting in a coachs box glumly clapping his hands. Once, Id
seen him and Turkey Sloan with their heads together in the
dugout. Plotting their next toy purchase? Writing another
rhymed telegram? How, I wondered, had I managed to make
such an enemy of the guy? How could I turn him from a
menace into a friend, or at least a neutral?
Around three in the morning, I stopped pacing and
looked at Jumbo. He worried me too. A few hours ago hed
powered two Roric Gundy curves and a low-and-away fastball
from Gundys reliever out of the Prefecture. Those shotsd
given him five home runs for the series, tying a CVL record
held by a former Opelika Orphan now in the Marines. This
morning, though, he seemed a coma victim, too fagged tove
performed the feats Ive just mentioned.
I leaned over him. The quarter moons of orangish-yellow
under his lids looked sicklier than usual. I picked up his
clammy wrist. I guess he had a pulse, but maybe Id plugged
into the throbbing feedback of my own. The pale light leaking
into our room from the streetlamps outside gave Jumbos still
body a gorgeous creepiness. I returned to my bed and sat there
watching him. A little later, I eased over onto my side and fell
asleep.
Jumbo woke me before dawn, and the Hellbenders assembled
in the Prefectures parking lot around eight to board the
team bus and return to Highbridge.
Riding home, I stayed awake, jostled by the lurch and
sway of the Bombers worn-out chassis and picked at more or
less good-naturedly by my teammates. On Highbridges north-western
outskirts, though, I slumped against my window and
escaped into a dream-addled sleep. . . .
more in tarnation could you want?
A life, Mister JayMac. My own life.
Voicestwo voicesdragged me wincing and blinking
out of the pit of my stupor. I lay on the split upholstery of one
of the Brown Bombers rearmost seats. Jumbo had deserted me.
As quietly as I could, I peeked over the back of the seat in front
of mine. Every Hellbender, not just Jumbo, had left the
Bombersome time ago if the absence of travel kits, ball
gloves, and snack wrappers meant anything.
In fact, the darkness of the buss interior, the coolness of
its metal floor, and the murky shade surrounding the Bomber
told me Dariusd driven it into the garage of the buggy house
beside McKissic House. Now, he and Mister JayMac faced
each other across the buss aisle up front. Neither realized I was
still aboard.
Maybe I shouldve coughed or sashayed nonchalantly up
the aisle, but it shamed me tove fallen so hard asleep I hadnt
noticed our arrival or heard Jumbo, Junior, Dunnagin, and all
the others getting off. More than likely, theyd crept off the
bus as tiptoey as elves, just to see how Id react to waking up
alone after theyd all gone inside.
Anyway, instead of showing myself, I hunched down out
of sight and held my breath.
You have a life here, Mister JayMac said. You have a
damn fine life here. Even an enviable one, Id say.
You might believe that, Darius said, but I caint.
Would you rather be in an all-Negro unit in New
Guinea building runways and taking atabrine to stave off malaria?
Nosir, Id rather
That stuff makes your ears ring. Turns the whites of
your eyes custard-yaller. Youd have to take it, though, because
the Armys precious quinine supplies go to their All-American
Caucasian boys.
Mebbe theyd give me half atabrine and half quinine. Jes
one eard ring, jes one eye turn yaller.
Mister JayMac didnt seem to hear Dariuss reply. He
said, Or howd you like to be in a colored regiment pick-axing
away at the Alcan Highway in subzero temperatures?
I know a man doing that. Hes proud to do it, he can
pint to that road and say he holp to build it.
Hes got a frozen tail, trench foot, and frost bite. I kept
you out of that. Saved your hide for better things.
Leastwise, for other things.
I pulled myself up again and peered over the seat. Mister
JayMac had a flask of whiskey and a brown ceramic coffee
mug. Darius had a mug. Mister JayMac tilted his flask and
shared out generous sloshes of liquor. Its yeasty sweet-tart
smell filled the bus.
Theyd already shared at least a mug each. Knee to knee
up there, they seemed close to exploding. Only Mister
JayMacs bosshood and Dariuss role as a black hired hand
kept them from pitching into donnybrook. The wrong word,
the sass of an eye, or one more slug of hooch might yet shove
them to it.
Doesnt playing baseball beat the likely alternatives?
I dont play baseball. I drive a bus. I step n fetch.
Nobody but you and me may know it, but youre a
grand sight more than a glorified chauffeur and houseboy.
Youre the de facto assistant manager of a contending CVL
baseball team.
De facto, Darius said.
It means
I know what it means. Hardly means doosquiddy.
Means Im a nigger with a big-shot friend.
Mister JayMac sipped at his mug. After a while, he said,
A life? A life you say. What does that mean? Just what do you
want that the worldthis world, not some pie-in-the-sky
pipedreamis ever gonna let you have?
A tryout with the Atlanta Black Crackers. Or the Kansas
City Monarchs. Or the Jacksonville Red Caps.
Are you asking my permission to leave Highbridge to play
with some run-on-a-shoestnng colored squad?
Darius stared out the window over Mister JayMacs head,
at a rotting harness on the wall of the old buggy house.
If you leave, Mister JayMac said, Ill see to it your
number comes up. Ill see to it you get tracked down fast and
straightaway inducted.
Thatd be bettern this glorified chauffeur and houseboy
job I got now, Darius said.
Assistant manager! Mister JayMac stood up and purposely
sloshed the whiskey in his mug on the Bombers steering wheel.
He didnt let go of his mug, but only because hed tangled his
middle finger through its handle. The only colored assistant
manager of a pro white ball club in the whole United States,
south or north, east or west, de facto or otherwise, and you
want to play with a bunch of unlettered darkies who never
know from year to year how many games their seasons gonna
have or even if their ballclubs got the financial stuffing to last a
month. Right?
I want to play where the Powers That Be gon let me,
Mister JayMac. Thats all.
I let you, I let you when I can. But, Darius, Ill see you in
battle dress before Ill let you sign with an uppish bunch of
Ethiops whore just as lief to file for bankruptcy as to play ten
games back to back. How does Private Satterfield grab you?
Fine.
Fine? What do you mean, fine?
If I caint play baseball, how bout gitting me sent to the
Tuskegee Army Airfield? Or to Shorter Field? Or mebbe to
Dale Mabry Field down to Tallahassee?
Mister JayMac laughed. Got your sights set high, dont
you? Well, hear the straight skinny, Darius. The only place
monkeys get to fly in combat is in The Wizard of Oz.
Darius chug-a-lugged his whiskey and gave his mug to
Mister JayMac, who set it and his own mug on the Bombers
dash. He looked ready to climb down and stalk to the house.
Darius got up and swung himself into the drivers seat. He
gripped the wheel, then lifted his fingers from the wet-paint
tackiness of the liquor coating it.
What you forgit, Mister JayMac, is monkeys come in
more colors than one. Some got two-toned souls.
Mister JayMac slammed his hand down on the dashboard.
The mugs there jumped, but didnt fall or break.
Darius, dont leave.
Darius took his handkerchief and wiped the steering
wheel, then his hands. A different color monkey probably
wouldnt want to.
Dont, Mister JayMac said. Did he mean dont leave or
dont talk that way or both? Darius stayed mum. Mister
JayMac banged the door open, leapt out, and strode through
the sawdust and pulverized shell litter on the floor.
I ducked to keep him from seeing me as he came past the
buss rear. Behind me, he creaked the tin-plated door open and
eased through this crack into the yard. The door rattled shut
again, but the light thatd fanned in, a burst of white-orange
sunlight and a storm of dancing motes, told me I hadnt slept
the whole day away.
Darius kept sitting behind the wheel. I couldnt get off
without him seeing me, and the talk Id overheard didnt
incline me to show myself. Mister JayMacd call me a filthy
sneak, and Dariusd take me for a whitebread spy. So I lay low
and waited for Darius to move.
Problem was, my pocketknife slipped from my pants and
hit the floor with an echoey clunk and a metallic bang. It hit on
its end, then toppled over on its side. Clunk-bang!
Whos back there? Darius said.
I bit my bottom lip.
Mice? Nazis? Cmon out, whoever you are.
I sat up. Darius stared at me in the slanted rectangle of
the rearview.
Jumping Jesus, he said. Whatre you doing back there,
Danny boy?
My shrug didnt explain much, I guess.
Git, Darius said. Leave me be.
I picked up my pocketknife and other gear, and pussy-footed
up the aisle, half expecting Darius to swat all my stuff
out of my hands, push me down, and tell me how only creeps
did what Id just done. He kept sitting, though. He didnt look
at me, not even a glance in the rearview.
I got off the bus. Its baggage holders stood empty. Jumbo
mustve carried my bag upstairs. He mustve enlisted everyone
elses helpeveryones but Mister JayMacs and Dariussto
play a joke on me. Ha ha. As I left the garage, Darius stayed
slouched behind the steering wheel: hollow-eyed, hair-trigger,
mute.
That evening, after dinner, a rap on our
door. The room seemed smaller than usual because, during our
road trip, a carpenter had put together a bed for me, with a
headboard and sliding storage drawers under the mattressmy
belated due as a Hellbender.
Anyway, the rapping startled us because we hadnt heard
anything, no tattle-tale creak of steps or floorboards. We
shouldve heard something: I sat scribbling a letter to Mama
Laurel, while Jumbo, despite hating most war-related stuff,
read Burma Surgeonbecause, as he put it, Colonel Seagrave
devotes himself to healing, not destruction. Finally, though,
we did hear.
Jumbo opened the door without getting up or losing his
place. Kizzy Lorrows, a brown gnome of a long-haired Seminole
woman. Her arms had flour on them, a rime like the gritty
blow on a plum. So did half her forehead. She wiped her hands
on her apron and pointed into the room at me.
Danl, you got a telephone caw. Long distance. Better git
yosef downstairs licky-spiddle.
That would be senseless, Jumbo said. Senseless.
His mama wants to talk to him. She dont know his
tongue stove up. He am told her.
I stood up. I shook my head. Mama didnt like the
phone, but I shouldve guessed shed eventually ring up to hear
me stammer.
Well, eventuallyd come, and Kizzy dismissed my head
shakes with a floppy-wristed wave. Ever minute you tarry you
toss good money at them telephone folks. Cmon, honey boy.
Ill speak for him, Jumbo said. He got up and nodded
at me. Kizzy barely reached his waist.
I grabbed notebook and pencil and hurried after them,
my heart cinched and a-gallop. Kizzy let us run ahead of her
down the two staircases to the foyer where a box-and-cradle
phone hung on the wall. Jumbo had to bend over to use it.
(Kizzyd used a stool.)
Mrs Boles, Im your sons roommate, Henry Clerval,
Jumbo told my mother. Daniel is fine.
Tell her I have larinjitus, I scribbled in my notebook.
Except, Im sorry to inform you, hes contracted a severe
case of laryngitis, Jumbo said. Otherwise, his strength and
vigor put the rest of us to shame.
Kizzy gave us both a scornful squint and strutted back to
the kitchen, swinging her arms like a Munchkin. The parlor
and game room were empty. Most of the other boarders had
gone over to McKissic Field for a community softball tournament.
I wrote, Say its temporary say its from cheering to hard.
Yessum. We won the last game of an otherwise frustrating
road trip. Daniel played well. He covered the mouthpiece.
Wherefore . . . why this subterfuge? Why not the truth?
Upset her, I wrote. Shed want to come down here.
When? Jumbo said. Why, quite recently. He covered
the mouthpiece again. Under the aspect of eternity, he told
me, then spoke into the mouthpiece again: Yessum, he plays
hard, eats well, and sleeps a sufficiency.
Mama said something.
Yessum, plenty of sleep. Plenty.
I held up a new message: Say Ill call later say Im writing a
letter. That last told the holy truth. No one could call me a
neglectful son.
Jumbo gagged the mouthpiece with his hand. She wishes
to talk to you. I shook my head. Jumbo slapped me with a
look. Yessum, he still has the use of his ears. No, no infection.
No ear ache. A moment. He passed me the tubelike earpiece.
Static hissed at me, rough electrical surf.
Danny? Mama said from hundreds of miles away.
Danny?
Jumbo leaned into the tuliplike cup of a speaker. Hes
listening, Mrs Boles.
Danny . . . I miss . . . I miss you.
And he you in return, Mrs Boles, Jumbo said.
Thank you, Mr Clerver, Mama said. Danny, Colonel and
Mrs Elshtain got plans to visit Highbridge this weekend. Come Sunday, its
the Fourth. Theyll want to see you. Im sending you a little something by
way of Miss Tulipa. Look for it.
Yessum, Jumbo said. He will.
Bye. Loveya. Bye now. Bye, Mama said, her
voice lost in the screak and gabble of the line.
Jumbo took the earpiece from me and cradled it. Lying
to a devoted parent robs one of the regard of honest men.
Perhaps you have cause, perhaps you do not.
And if I dont, I wrote, Im no longer a REAL PERSON???
Cut to the quick. Jumbo trudged across the foyer to the
stairs, then went up, his body windowed between the balusters
like a person caught in the frames of a film strip. Like the
creature in the Frankenstein movies.
Anyway, I didnt want to go upstairs with Jumbonot
yet, at least. Hed helped me with the telephone call, but hed
also accused me of lying, of not being a REAL PERSON. To
hell with him, let him go.
Tardily, I followed Kizzy into the kitchen. At her center
island, she stood rolling out dough for a huge blackberry and
dewberry cobbler.
Yo mama sweet to caw you, Danl. Course, mamas aint
got much chice but to worry bout they chirrens bred in, like
a quail dogs urge to pint.
Kizzyd stayed late. Sometimes she did. The kitchen of
McKissic House (so long as she didnt have to scrub pots or
throw-mop the linoleum) gave her a sharper sense of home, I
figured, than the four-room box of shingles, tarpaper, and sheet metal, over
by Penticuff Strip, where she lived. Her chirrenMuscles
said she had sevenhad all grown up and married.
All but a no-account son or two had moved away, to Atlanta or
Chicago, and these homeboys, depending on how you viewed
the matter, either didnt torment Kizzy any longer or flat-out
ignored her. Kizzys husband, a man she still called Oliver Bob,
had died during the corn harvest of 21, under a buckboard
driven by a rattlesnake-mean white farmer.
I lit into scrubbing a pot tonights KP squad had left in
the sink. I plunged into that pot up to my elbows. Above the
sink, I could look through both a rippled window pane and the
torn mesh of the screened-in porch.
Through them I saw the carriage house. An ivory trellis
guided a strangle of rose vines up it to a raised window with a
crooked jamb and two broken shutters. Darius slept there, over
a storage room for ball equipment, over the garage where the
Brown Bomber ticked and simmered. What did Darius do up
there when he couldnt sleepwhen the call of another life
clanged inside him like a fire alarm?
Kizzy said, I told you Miss Giselles got no chirren.
Thats true. She dont. Caint have none. Once, thuddy-fo,
thuddy-five years ago, she and Mister JayMac did have a chile.
Come to em dumpling-fat, pink as a fresh red wriggler. But it
took Miss Giselle bettern a day to have her, and when the baby
do come, the secundineswhat my mama cawed the foller-longdidnt
want to roller.
I revved my elbow, but kept my ear cocked to Kizzys
story. Shed begun it soon as shed noticed me peering through
the honeysuckle-loaded gloom at Dariuss window.
The secundines, the afterbirth, it had to git clear. Somebody
had to fetch it, not fo the bairn so much as fo Miss
Giselle. That baby was turned jes fine, but Miss Giselle had her
a fever skin, a shiny jacket o birth sweat. She got fluster-brained.
She magined she was heping her daddy tree a possum
over by Cotton Creek n likewise trying to hush this pair of
hollering dogs.
Quiet! shed caw. Quiet, Cherie! Quiet, Smut!
Then shed go, Shoot that night rat, Daddy! Please, you gots to
shoot it! I didnt midwife in them days, but Dr Sellers had me
there wi Mister JayMac to hold Miss Giselle down. We pinned
her, held her to, like hired mens at pig-sticking time. She
thrished n thrashed, but we held er. Pritty soon, her cries got
real groany, and her eyes rolled back, white as hard-biled eggs n
jes as blind.
Ive got to fetch that afterbirth, Dr Sellers told Mister
JayMac. Caint leave it in er like a rag in a pendix hole. He
scrubbed his hands with lye soap n rinched em real good in
grain alcohol, then set down twix the missuss legs to pick at
the blood organ what wouldnt come of itsef. He fished for
that broke-up thing n got it out in pieces over a battle o three,
mebbe fo hours.
Doc, Mister JayMac say, youre damn like to kill er.
Not if you hush up n set that lamp where it jes might
do some good, Dr Sellers say.
Way it look at fust, baby gon live, but Miss Giselle bout
set for morticianizing n hymns. Dr Sellers had dug in her deep
and she was weak. It happened reversed around, though. That
fat n wriggly gal baby took sick n went down like a orphan calf.
She jes skinnied off n died. Mister JayMac cussed the doctor,
flung some ol crockery bout, carried on like Job hissef. Miss
Giselle, though, she improved, bloomed n flourished right up to
the pint Mister JayMac had to say they gal baby gone.
Dont think she flew off like Mister JayMac. Uh-uh. Aw
by hissef, hes upsot nough fo a whole family. Miss Giselle
withered into her own quiet woman grief, but she didnt go
down, didnt pitch over broke. Not at fust, anyhow. Then her
bosoms flooded, like shed had these kicking twins stead of a
gal baby awready dead. Had so much milk she leaked into her
bedclothes, her nightdresses, day clothes too. Mister JayMac
tol Dr Sellers to do something. If he dont, he gon pay.
So Dr Sellers hopped. He sweet-talked, soothed, and
nigh on to comfort-coddled Miss Giselle, who lapsed anyways,
turning back to fever sweats. With her mind on Canaan, her
bosoms made even mo milk. Dr Sellers tol Mister JayMac her
problem wi the placenter gon to steal any chanst fo other
young uns, no matter what he try, no matter how hot Mister
JayMacs temper biles. Mister JayMac didnt rant or nothing,
jes ast the doctor to ease Miss Giselles bosom flow n bring her
on back from her addlement.
Anyhow, Dr Sellers reckoned he could try whatever,
now things gone so bad n Mister JayMac so deep in his
melancholy. And what he did was, he brought these two hongry
bluetick puppies in and put em at Miss Giselles bosoms.
These pups had freckle bellies n snouts so squashed they
looked like ugly ol men. When the doctor stuck em to Miss
Giselles teats to draw off her milk, they scrumbled n rooted n
tormented that po fevered woman something furious.
Mister JayMac come home. He heard pups whining and
his missus yipping pitiful under the nick o they milk teeth. He
bulged right in n slung the doctor to the flo. Gashed him from
chin to ear, used his belt to do it. Thew that man out the
house, down the steps. Dr Sellers moved off to AlabamaFairhope,
I think. Miss Giselle, she stayed wounded. Couldnt
have no other baby, gal or manchile. Never understood fo the
longest how shed come to git sech scratches n pricks round her
bosoms.
The inside of my pot shone like a cannon bore. My
hands ached from the scouring Id given it.
Thats a Highbridge story. A Mister JayMac n Miss
Giselle story. I didnt work fo them then, but I heard that story
quick nough afterwards. Miss Giselle was among the last to
hear, and shes mebbe never gon stop suffering from what that
fool doctor done after her gal baby born, then again after the
po thing passed.
Crickets chatted and whistled on the screened-in porch.
Outside, fireflies bobbed, turning their flashlights on and off.
One lit up at the sill of Dariuss window, rose a foot or so, and
got blotted out by the brighter light coming from the room
behind it. Darius crossed in front of the window. For a second
or less, the firefly scorched a point into his dark form. Kizzy
stood at my side, both of us gawping at the buggy house,
straining our vision through the screen. Honeysuckle leaked its
easy smell into the yard, and the night hung down around us
black as overripe muscadines.
That Darius, Kizzy said. Hes jes ashes n wormwood
to Miss Giselle.
I looked at Kizzy.
Why? she said. Cause hes Mister JayMacs oldest
living chile.
The next day, after a light workout at
the ballpark, Jumbo borrowed Mister JayMacs Caddyhe did
get perks no one else didand drove off into Alabama again.
Why? He had no living kin there, although hed lied about that
before (if he wasnt lying now), and even a quick trip over and
back could leave you panting. On a steamy Georgia day, Idve
rather played some more ball than go for a ride in a blazing-hot auto.
Upstairs, I had lots to mull. Mamad nearly found out Id
slid back into dummyhood again. To muddy the waters more,
the Elshtains would arrive this weekend to visit the McKissics,
and theyd easily discover what Id tried to hide from my mama
over the phone. Mama would find out from the Elshtains later,
and although she might see, and even forgive, my lie as an
attempt to spare her pain, she might also decide I should come
home to Tenkiller for treatment and TLC.
I didnt want to leave Highbridge. Despite the Souths
summer swelter, the torments Buck Hoey and friends had
aimed at me, and a roommate big enough to scare a Marine, Id
begun to adjust. To the weird rituals of McKissic House. To
my role on the team. I liked playing ball for the Hellbenders. I
didnt want to return to the mile-long apron strings and the
boredom of my life in dust-bowl Oklahoma. I loved Mama
Laurel, sure, but Id truly begun scrapping for my manhooda
sense of my stand-alone selfin the CVL.
While Jumbo prowled the oiled and gravel byways of
Alabama, I had nothing to do. A few guys had gone to their
part-time jobs at Foremost Forge or Highbridge Box & Crate.
A few others had caught a trolley uptown to a matinee, and
everybody elsed settled in to nap, play cards, or letter-write. Id
mailed Mama a letter just that morning. Cards, with no cricket
chirps or dance-band music to play by, appealed to me about
as much as a swig of bicarbonate.
Upstairs, I had idle hands. So I fired up a cigarette,
crossed my arms, and rocked on my heels like a tough in a
gangster show. Humphrey Bogart? George Brent? Lloyd Nolan?
I had tove looked like one of em, right?
By degrees, though, I ambled across the room to Jumbos
space: his humongous bed, his pine-plank-and-tin-can bookcase,
his bedside wash stand and lamp table. I stood there
puffing my Old Gold and eyeballing all this stuff. The book
shelves Id examined before. Along with new library books,
they held poetry, novels, philosophy, history, and religious
texts, many old and some in French or German.
I walked around the bed, sat down on it by the bookcase,
and opened something in French by a woman named Christine
de Pisan. The books paper smelled like dried beetle wingsdusty
sharp, I meanand sour ink. I couldnt decode a word, once past
stuff like le and la and amour. It all just stymied me.
So I shut old Christine and stuck her back in the bookcase.
Somethingboredom, curiositymade me look back between
my legs. Up under Jumbos bed I saw crammed what
looked like a small boat, a kind of Eskimo canoe.
Yeah, a kayak!
I dragged the skin-covered frame out from under the twin
plyboards Jumbo slept on. There was barely room for it in the
space between bed and bookcase. I had to turn it longways and
straddle it. It hadnt slid all that easily either, probably because
Jumbod loaded it with stuff through its central manhole.
Dustbunnies furred its sides.
The first thing I found in the cockpit was the mat hed
hung as a curtain until my angry fit in LaGrange. Hed folded
it five or six times and stuffed it down into the manhole as a
plug. I pulled it out and looked under it. There sat a loose bag
of animal hides, tied at the neck with cords of sinew and
knotted with little ivory beads. It smelled fusty-funny, in a way
I cant describe.
No matter how I resisted, that bag felt like a dare, a dare
to look inside it. Pulling a kayak out from under a bed hadnt
struck me as prying, but removing that folded mat had inched
me towards a bad self-feeling, and the bag posed an even harder
test of my honor. Id stooped, so to speak, to snoopery, and
Mama hadnt raised me to pry. But Jumbo needed unlocking
worse than his bag did; maybe untying it would open him too.
Inside the bag, I found a journal bound in split and
marbled leather, with a bundle of ribbon-tied letters between
its last page and its back cover. The letter sheaf had the bulk of
a small book. I studied it closely, but didnt unknot the ribbon.
The paper felt brittle, crisp as fallen leavesI feared I might
crumble some pages. At last, I withdrew the top letter, eased it
from its envelope, and unfolded the first of four or five thin
pages.
The handwritingwith all its squiggles, smudges, and
suchwas in English, not some unspeakable foreign lingo.
The first letter, addressed to an English woman, was dated
December 11th, 1798. It said, You will rejoice to hear that
no disaster has accompanied the commencement of an enterprise
which you have regarded with such evil forebodings. It
took a minute to decipher that sentence, but once Id figured it
out, I read it again and went on to the rest.
The writer was a young naval adventurer, the captain of
an English merchant ship sailing from a Russian port towards
the North Pole. The man called himself Robert Walton, and
he stupidly reckoned the polar cap a country of eternal light,
despite the ice plains his ship would have to navigate to reach
it. The English woman he wrote was his sister, Mrs Saville. In
his fourth letter, which turned into a log of shipboard events,
he said he and his men had seen a sledge on the ice. A
manlike giant had mushed his dog team beyond them, out of telescope
range. This appearance, Walton wrote his sister, excited
our unqualified wonder. I guess so.
Anyway, his mention of a giant made me think Jumbod
hidden the letters because they reported on his ancestors. I
figured Walton had seen an early forebear of Jumbos on the
sled, maybe Great-great-grandfather Clerval.
After four of Waltons letters, I reached the opening of
the life story of a fevered European rescued from the ice by
Waltons sailors. Walton had acted as this mans secretary,
writing down all he said, so even though you got the guys
whole personal history, you got it in Waltons handwriting. I
am by birth a Genevese, the man told him, and my family is
one of the most distinguished of that republic. Of course, I
didnt care rip about his la-di-da family.
So I refolded the letters and tied them up again with a
ribbon such as couldve decorated a ball gown for Napoleons
Josephine. I was about to jam this sheaf into the journal or log
thatd held them, and to stuff the log back into the funny skin
bag, and the funny skin bag back into the kayakwhen a
powerful urge to check out the log overcame me and I thumbed
it open at the beginning:
Here I commence a new life. In the wretchedness of the candle-end of
my former existence, I hoped only to die. So far into the maw of ruthlessness
and depravity had I fallen, albeit at the heartless prodding of my maker, that I
now despised myself as the world did. I ached for death, for the surcease of
unappealable extinction, and hopefully I commended my spirit to that bleak
demesne.
Of a sudden, after who knows how long or wherefore my unwelcome
reprieve, I breathe again. My damaged heart thumps in the cave of my chest.
My frozen limbs stir. My eyes, moments ago eclipsed by a primordial dark,
lift into focus the Arctic stars and the sapphirine ice of a world that
yesterday, or centuries past, I all too gladly fled and foreswore. Today,
like Christendoms fabled Son of Man, I am resurrected.
This entry had no date, but it lookedold. It sounded
old too. Reading it over, I could hear Jumbo speaking. So I
also imagined him, once upon a time, writing them in a fancy
handin English. Hed shaped his words a lot like Waltons,
almost like hed used Waltons for a model.
I carried Jumbos log to the school desk at the head of
my new bed, where I started copying Jumbos story into my
bigger notebook. It seemed important to do thisthe most
important thing I could do to keep Jumbo whole in my mind
while I cut him open and laid him out like a lab frog in my
crabbed copybook hand:
In homage to the merchant captain who set down in its entirety the
story of my tormented maker, I indite in English this account of my final
days as his creature. Of my new life subsequent to a perplexing resuscitation
I also write. English leaps as readily to my brain, and thence to my hand, as
does French. Did my brain once belong to a native of Albion? Whatever the
case, I commence my new life with the fresh mental perspective afforded by the
tongue of Marlowe, Shakespeare, and Milton.
What I now recollect of my old life is that after fleeing the ship on
which had died the author at once of my being and its wretchedness, I could
not steel myself to follow Frankenstein into the all-consuming abyss. Nay, I
could not slay that which he had animated. Although I had promised Walton,
in our unplanned meeting over my fathers corpse, that I would annihilate
myself in flames, I temporized. I discovered excuses to sustain my body, that
great puppet of patchwork flesh that hauled about the ice my anguish-freighted
soul; and with my body, my consciousness.
As I delayed, the weather grew ever more vicious and storm-racked.
The northern lights faded behind a veil of tattered and then granitic clouds,
from which snow whirled in turbulent blizzards and beneath which the oceans
turned to entrapping rock. Walton and his crew could not break their vessel
from this white prison, nor did the storms or cold relent to hearten, with even
a feeble glimmering of escape, these unhappy men. By mid-October, all aboard
the Caliban, Waltons ship, had perished, frozen, starved, or been slain;
previously, however, the captain had bent himself to copying every single word
of every unsent letter to his sister, as if this obsessive activity would both
warm his bones and free the fast-held Caliban from the ice.
During the winter onslaught, I huddled with my sledge against the
elements. I gathered about me my dogs. Around us, I erected a crude but
fanciful fortification of ice. Inside the eye-stabbing brightness of this shelter, a
dome on the groaning floes, I watched with pitiless interest the decline of my
dogs, so cruelly deranged in their discomfort and hunger. They snarled at and
bit one another, gnashing their teeth in fury, so that to prevent a massacre
among them, I throttled the instigators, as I had throttled the foremost loved
ones of my creator.
Even with their insulating fur, the dogs withstood the Arctic cold less
well than I, for the howling of the gales invigorated me. Indeed, the continuous
whipping of snow and pelletlike surface ice across that desert served only to
confirm in me my decision to live.
Frankenstein, in assembling me from the bloodless leftovers of corpses,
had unwittingly inured me to the depredations of polar cold. My dogs,
however, suffered from it, turning on one another in terrifying fits of
rapaciousness. In those same days, I so far forsook my preference for fruits,
berries, and nuts that I ate the flesh of one of my animals. Later I distributed
a moiety of its substance to the starved survivors.
At the end of these storms, I released from my pitted icehouse the only
three dogs yet alive. With cries and menacing gestures, I chased them across
that wasteland. They did not understand this eviction. Indeed, one dog sought
to recover my affections with a fawning crawl and much ingratiating
tail-wagging. At last, though, my unappeasable hostility conveyed itself to this
animal and its four-lewed comrades: with a barrage of ice missiles I induced
them to retreat.
If I could not die on a self-made funeral pile, perhaps I could take my
life by striding over the floes to the pole itself. Unlike Walton, I had no
expectation of encountering there an eye of balmy warmth, but rather a
ravaging cyclone of such sharp cold that, in the space between heartbeats, it
would annihilate me. Hoping for such a fate, I set off from my ice shelter in
what I assumed the correct direction. Above me, the sky burned like an
alarming white mirror.
At length I spied at some distance the shroud of ropes and canvas that
tented an ice-locked ship. I recognized this vessel as the Caliban.
What other vessel, at this bleak time of year, had ventured so far into the
Arctic wastes? Whether the storm had disoriented me or some inner compass had
guided my steps mockingly towards my makers wooden tomb, I know not. I knew
only that I must complete my unplanned trek and board the ship. I did so with
a curiosity greater than my revulsion at the thought of again exposing myself
to human enmity.
I need not have trepidated. Every person aboard Waltons ship, as earlier
noted, had died of hunger, frost, or intestine violence among the crew. The
Caliban entombed not only Frankenstein, but also Walton and his
sailors. I trod, then, a ship of death, and only the decay-postponing
steward-ship of the cold kept the odours of rot from checking my headlong
inspection of the vessel.
Frankenstein, I should remark, had known a death-sleep longer than that of
any other soul on the Caliban. I had no difficulty locating either him
or Walton, however, for at some point in their ordeal the most vengefully
inclined sailors, perhaps thinking to defile the bodies of those to whom they
attributed the full burthen of their predicament, had brought the two
menone dead, one presumably yet aliveabovedecks. Here they had
lashed them back to back to the forward mast. Here Walton had died, his body
so disposed that he might gaze impotently upon the unfolding mutiny. My
creator, meanwhile, faced the blankness of the northern sea, his eyes cracked
like small glass balls, his lips the silver-blue of oiled metal. I had slain
before, but never had I witnessed at one moment, among creatures purportedly
rational, such desolation and carnage, nor had the terrible melancholy of
this scene devolved wholly from the blows of wind and frost. Dogs and men, it
occurred to me, shared a desperation-fed savagery.
Mayhap I laughed.
Abovedecks and below, I explored the Caliban. After hurriedly
perusing and securing for myself both the packet of letters that Walton had
written his sister and the copy that he had made, I returned to the bow mast
and cut down the author of my grotesque form and so of my pariahhood.
Frankensteins skin had pulled tight to his bones. His limbs had less pliancy
than wood, not because rigor mortis had untowardly persisted but rather
because the fluids of life had frozen in his veins. In this way was my maker
rendered a macabre monument to his own vanity and hardness of heart. There on
the deck, I kneaded him into a parody of flexibility. Then I threw him over
my shoulder like a sack of meal and quitted the Caliban, leaping to
the ice from a height that would have staggered a being of merely human
parentage.
I stopped copying. If Jumbo had written this sensational
stuff, he was laying claim to a sideways sort of kinship to a
European scientist named . . . well, Frankenstein. Hed also
confessed to an unspecified murder or murders: I had slain
before. That thrilled me. I mean, itd taken me nearly a month
to persuade myself Jumbo, despite his size and looks, meant no
one, least of all me, any harm. And now Id just read four
words in his own hand that shot down all my hard-earned
notions of his harmlessness.
I lit a cigarette. The butts of a couple of others lay
smoldering in the ashtray on my desk. My tongue tasted like a
charred wedge of bologna.
Then a calming thought occurred, a thought that made
more sense than tagging Jumbo the mad golem of an eighteenth-century
anatomy student and chemist by the name of
Frankenstein: Jumbo was writing a book, a novel. His bulk and
his lopsided face had led him to see himself in Karloffs screen
monsterwhich he really didnt much resembleand to write
an original story featuring himself in the monsters role. That
theory tied up a few of my frayed nerves.
I went back to reading and copying:
With Frankensteins corpse as freight, I struck out from Waltons ship
towards the south. In the long dusk at that latitude, directions were hard to
verify. Still, both the rush of ice-capped sea currents and the benison of fuller
sunlight told me that I had intuited my course aright. Even the lovely
gyre-making of a raptor, shadowed on the snow, seemed to approve my migration
route. Oddly, I had no idea what my destination must be or why I had
undertaken this grueling journey; a month or more ago, I had thought to end
all my journeyings in the swift uprush of a funeral blaze.
Almost insensate, I trudged the whiteness. I steered by the low-riding
sun on a southeasterly oblique that at length brought me off the ice onto a vast
range of undulant snow. I scarcely paused, either to moisten my parched lips
or to poke beneath the glacial crust for a root or tuber with which to propitiate
the gods of hunger. Whenever I chanced near crude fishing villages or inland
settlements, I took pains to avoid confrontation with the inhabitants. I fled
men as the tundra wolf does.
Indeed, I had for companions on one leg of my journey a pack of
wolves. They trailed alongside, eager for me to stumble under the dead
Frankenstein and so succumb to their fangs. Once, half exasperated, half
exultant, I stooped and compacted a missile of ice. Immediately, I dispersed
the pack by hurling this frozen shot into its ranks. It slewyea, nearly
decapitatedone lean but shaggy animal, the example of whose demise
vividly impressed itself upon the others.
One morning, after a rare surrender to the call of sleep, I awoke to
find myself and the inert nearby form of my creator surrounded by reindeer.
These lithe beasts browsed that terrain as if he and I had inextricably melded
with it. No alarm, or even skittishness, did we provoke in them, not even
when I arose from my bed of snow and once more lay my fathers corpse over
my shoulder. For miles, it seemed, I trudged with these deer, migrant with
them, a fallen seraph among the ice wastes ghostly kine.
An unexpected change in the weather at last effected our separation
from the herd. A wind of gale proportions blasted ice grains across the
snowscape. I howled into this howling. Land forms but an arms length away
shewed as blurred geometries. I failed at them, for I wished both contact and
certainty. Between the roaring gusts, I sometimes thought I saw fantastic
cliffs, as white as milk and evanescent as truth.
At length I came to those ill-seen ramparts. Like a thousand panpipes
the storm whistled, even as snow sleeted in interthreaded sheets. A channel in
the rock led me blindly upwards. Had I known the precariousness of my
ascent, with a corpse as entrammeling cargo, I would have thrown myself
upon the nearest rock face and clung to it like an apperceptive lichen.
Fortunately perhaps, I had no such understanding of the danger and so
proceeded with the singlemindedness of a zealot.
It would have eased my task to drop Frankenstein and struggle on
alone, but a stubborn scrupulosity prevented me; a perversity, many might
accuse, for at some point on my trek I had resolved to recompense myself upon
this man, who had so aggrieved and hurt me, by tearing his heart from his
breast. I intended to feed that cold organ, piece by bitter piece, to the hawks of
the Kara Sea, and no hardship met on my way could turn me from this aim.
The passion of my will notwithstanding, I weakened. The winds
howling, combined with the unrelenting sting of ice and blasted rock, vitiated
my strength. Fatigue came. In time, groping along a narrow ice ledge, I
chanced upon a crevasse, a doorway into shelter. I crawled in, dragging my
passenger with me. Here I obtained to a peacefulness in which I had nearly
lost faith. Here, indeed, I slept.
Let me rather indite that like a peltless bear, I hibernated. How long I
lay thus stupefied, wrapped about my sires body, I cannot tell. Somewhere in
that sleep, I drifted so near the ivory reef of extinction that I dreamt myself
moored to it. The deepest flint of my awareness now took as dead the
foundered body that it had once animated. That iotas last spark guttered
towards darkness. Insofar as consciousness remained to me, it exulted in the
nearness of its extinguishment.
Time passed. More time succeeded to this. Then, to my initial dismay and
bewilderment, my shelters roof fell inclamourously,
precipitouslyand a myriad spectacular figures of lightning revived me
to the long heartache of the world. Precisely how this revival occurred, I
cannot relate. Why it should have happened capsulates a mystery even
more recondite. Lightning, thunder, biting sleetmeteorological
phenomena seldom seen in trainassaulted my cavern, quickening in me the
blood-borne engines of life. Although Frankenstein, my author, of course
continued dead, I had reluctantly arisen. The outcome of this fleer at
mortality lay hidden in the ice rains of the night and the unforeseeable
weathers of tomorrow. . . .
Id been copying Jumbos wordsif they were his wordsfor
nearly three hours. Boy, could he spin it out! His story
had a raw power. So did his old-timey sentences. I stopped at
unforeseeable weathers of tomorrow because those words
ended the first section of his journal. Thumbing ahead, the less
I thought it all an opera-sized fiction and the more I figured it
a record of a mansan artificial personslong and peculiar
life.
In fact, the next section of the journal had a title, From
Remorse to Self-Respect: My Second Life.
By now Id smoked seven cigarettes and sweated through
my T-shirt. Jumbo didnt just look like a monster, the victim
of a crazed pituitaryhe was a monster, the handmade stepson
of a scientist whose name had become a synonym for . . .
well, for Hollywood jeepery-creepery. Mister JayMac had given
me to room with an inhuman critter whod killed, cursed life,
and stalked his shook-up maker to a packet ship in the Barents
Sea. I was living with the thing!
Suddenly, in that hot attic: an icicle to the heart.
I heard Jumbo on the stairs. Despite his size, he didnt
have a heavy footfall, but the steps from the second floor to the
third, if hit just right (or just wrong), creaked like a mast
rigging, and Jumbo sometimes hit them so as to warn me he
was on his way. Pretty thoughty. He didnt want to catch me
whacking off to a Varga girl, I guess. Or maybe he just hoped
Id reverse the favor. Anyway, I shouldve hurried to slide his
stolen letters back into his journal, and his journal back into
the bag, and the bag back into his kayak, and the kayak back
under his bed, so he wouldnt catch me snooping.
But I didnt. A funny feeling grabbed me, and I convinced
myself my snooping didnt weigh a sou against the cruddy
deception hed worked on my teammates and me. Especially
me. Hed tried to pass as a human beingOn Being a Real
Person, what a joke!when he actually had blood lines similar
to a can of Spams.
I put his letters in the journal, his log in the leather bag,
and his bag in the kayak, but I left the kayak out from under
the bed, a slap at his dishonesty.
Jumbo came in. Hello, Daniel. Its infernally hot up
here. Why arent you? He saw the kayak. He saw that I
hadnt even bothered to replug its manhole with his grass mat,
and he shot me a look. I shot it right back, cheeky as rip,
condemning him for a liar.
Jumbo sighed and removed his ivory-tied leather bag
from the kayak. He eased his marbled log book out of the bag.
The letters fell out. The looseness of the ribbon holding them
togetherit unraveled as they felltold Jumbo what he
wanted to know: Id eyeballed the contents. He made no move
to pick up the letters.
Instead, he opened the log. He held it in one hand, like a
hymnal, and licked his index finger so he could page through it.
He turned three or four pages. He squinted at the books
gutter, sniffed it, and made a facewhich was sort of like
Quasimodo pulling on a Halloween mask. Then puffed into
the log and blew a scatter of cigarette ashes at me.
He knew. I knew. We both knew.
Ah, Jumbo said. He sat down on the edge of his bed
and stared past me out the window.
Maybe I shouldve run for cover. An inhuman fiend had
caught me red-handedwell, pink-handedrummaging
through his stuff. It stood to reason hed want to wreak
bone-crushing havoc on my person.
I couldnt get scared. Id lived with Jumbo a month. Id
trusted him enough as a teammate to make dozens of long
throws across the infield to him. Id eaten with him and
listened to his manateelike gasps as he slept. He was my roomy.
Besides, the idea of an inhuman fiend compiling private papers
sort of contradicted itself. Most inhuman fiends dont write
memoirs. If they doMein Kampf, say, or The Enemy
Withinthey dont often refer to themselves as fiends, demons,
abominations, ogres, or wretches.
You made excellent use of your afternoon, I see. Jumbo
put his log on his knees and flipped on through it. You dont
disappoint me. I had hoped your curiosity would prompt you
to this. Like nearly everyone else, Daniel, I yearn for a kindred
spirit. A friend.
Pardon me? Had Jumbo just implied that because Id
snooped on him, hed now regard me as a friend?
I wanted you to find the kayak, he said. And hoped that
it would lead you to examine it further, even to the point of
unloading it. I feared only that a superstitious scruple would
prevent you from ransacking my belongings for their secrets.
A scruple like honesty?
Your activity this afternoon greatly relieves me. Now I
dont have to hide my origins or lie about myself. Thank you,
Daniel, for having more curiosity than character.
Youre welcome, I thought.
Was Jumbo pummeling me with sarcasms? He didnt
seem to be. He tapped the log in his lap. How far did you
read?
I shrugged.
Jumbo set the log aside and stood. The Karloff festival in LaGrange was
a lucky event. Despite the pain those films often give me, I took you because
Id decidedalmost decidedto reveal my true identity
to you. The Frankenstein trilogy highlights the similarities and the
differences, of bearing and behavior, between Karloffs impersonation of
a monster and my daily burlesque of a human being. On line there, I almost
lost my nerve and tried to dissuade you from going in, but,
happily, you insisted. My nerve failed me again inside the
theater, but you prevailed there too. Tell me, thendid those
films in any way prompt todays meddling?
I shrugged again.
But Jumbo had neared the truth. Since attending the
Roxy, Id allowed all my shapeless doubts about him to gel into
one fat suspicion.
He paced. Those movies corrupt events more accurately
portrayed in the epistolary writings of Robert Walton. He
picked up the letters from the floor and went on pacing. The
world knows these events, however, as the first novel of Mary
Wollstonecraft Shelley, wife of the English poet, Percy Bysshe
Shelley. Daniel, have you ever read the text published as her
novel Frankenstein? I felt like I was listening to several different
radios at the same time: too much information raining down.
Have you? For the first time since returning to our room,
Jumbo scared me.
I nodded because I had.
Excellent. You apprehend that I am the ogre whose
origins receive such injudicious, even libelous, treatment in the
first Karloff film. He shook the letters. The fiend whose true
history discloses itself here. Did you peruse these pages or only
my journal?
I nodded at the journal on his bed. I couldnt explain that
Id skimmed Waltons first four letters before . . . well, copying
out the opening entry in his log.
Before you question me, read these letters, Jumbo said.
All of them. He placed them on my desk, on the notebook
Id been using when I first heard his footsteps.
I picked up the letters.
Jumbo went to his bookcase and took out a stained volume.
Or reread this. Its text more or less duplicates the texts
of Waltons letters. Where they diverge, the letters represent
the more accurate transcription of events. He gave me the
book and took the letters away. But read the book. Its type is
easier on the eye than Waltons cursive.
Jumbo tied his letters up again and placed them, along
with his journal, into the beaded leather bag. He put the bag in
the kayak and the mat into its cockpit, shoved the loaded kayak
back under his bed, and abruptly left the room.
Reading a book on the sneak has a lot
more allure than getting it thrown at you as an assignment.
Oliver Twist as a book-report chore will bore you to lip drool.
The same pages sampled in the library stacks will rev up your
mind and carry you faster than a bullet train to a new world.
Id enjoyed reading Jumbos log. Whether Id like rereading
Frankenstein on his outright command was a moot question. I
had half a mind to throw his plump little book out the window.
But I started it and ran headlong into the blah-blah-blahs thatd almost
stopped me dead in my tracks in high school, junk like diffusing a
perpetual splendor, the inestimable benefit which I shall confer on
all mankind, under your gentle and feminine fosterage, and so on.
Luckily, the writerMary Shelley, Robert Walton,
whoeverfinally rolled out the cannons and calliopes,
adrenaline-rousing stuff about whale-fishers, Russia, dog sledges, and a
creature of gigantic stature out on the icesections that
reminded me of Jumbos own log, of course, and even of his
highfalutm style, but that riveted me to my chair anyway.
Pretty soon, Id reached Victor Frankensteins account of
trying to build a creature about eight feet in height, and
proportionately large. It got to be evening. Jumbo came in and
put a cake pan of vegetables and a fork in front of me.
Eat, he said.
I noticed that Jumbos faceyellow cheeks, watery eyes,
bluish black lipssquared with the books first description of
the monster. But I kept reading and ate without looking at the
cake pan or tasting what Kizzyd fixed.
I read all night. Jumbo mayve walked the grounds or
dozed on a parlor sofa. Who knows? Around four in the
morning, he poked his head back in just as the fiend in Frankenstein
says, Polluted by crimes and torn by the bitterest remorse,
where can I find rest but in death?
Yeah, where? I motioned Jumbo in and read the storys
last three paragraphs.
Well? he said.
I tossed the book back and paced the room with my
hands in my back pockets. I mustve looked a little like the
tormented anatomy student at the height of his project: eyes
red-rimmed, hair sweaty, hands as fluttery as quail.
Jumbo had evolved out of the body and the personality
of a patchwork thing gimmicked into life by Victor Frankenstein.
In the account said to be Mrs Shelleys, Jumbod had no name, just
creature, monster, fiend, or demon, and nobody but
nobody called him mister or sir. Henry Clerval, the name Jumbo
used today, had once belonged to Frankensteins best friend,
another of Jumbos early murder victims. So you had to believe
hed killed, or caused to die, at least five people, including the
man whod created him, and the friend named Clerval.
Thing is, despite Jumbos journal and his looks, I still
didnt quite buy that he was the monster. My minds eye kept
casting back to that ship caught in the ice of the Barents Sea,
but the off-chance that Hoey and his pals were trying to con
me kept me from tumbling brain over butt to its truth.
I asked you to read my story, Jumbo said, because you
would understand that the crimes of my youth have had no
sequel in this epoch of my life. I require an ally, Daniel.
I rubbed my upper arms like somebody trying to stay
warm in a meat locker. Every lobe of my brain felt more tightly
packed than a butterball turkey.
Practice in four hours, Jumbo said. Perhaps we should
sleep. He stretched out on his bed and, in thirty seconds or
less, began to snort and wheeze.
My questions sorted themselves into a long, worry-laden
file. In Mrs Shelleys doctored transcription of the deathbed
confession of Dr Frankenstein, his creature had been a true
monster: eight feet tall. Nobody could look at him without
cringing or picking up a stick. No mortal could support the
horror of that countenance, Frankenstein had said, a thing
such as even Dante could not have conceived. Which mostly
proves Dante never visited Dixie: Jumbo had a fair claim on
ugliness, but if you looked, he wasnt much grottier than some
of the folks prowling Kmart of an evening.
Other questions?
Well, the fiend in the novel has the agility and stamina
of an Olympic athlete. Once, like an ape with vernier jets, he
shinnies straight up the face of a small mountain. Jumbo had
the upper-body look of a gorilla, but his bad legs wouldnt let
him scale a cliff that fast.
I also had to wonder again about Jumbos age. If he and the
monster in Mrs Shelleys novel were one and the same,
whatd my roommate been doing for the past century and a
half? No one that big could hide very long, at least not in a
city or a town, and I couldnt imagine how hed ended up
playing ball in Highbridge.
Finally, how did Jumbo feel about himself and everything
thatd happened to him? Dr Frankenstein couldnt tolerate his
critters looks. Hed skedaddled soon after mumbo-jumboing
awake the graveyard parts hed used to model the thing. If you
bought this Frankenstein foofaraw, Jumbo didnt actually rate,
biologically, as the doctors getbut the doctord made him,
and if you give something life, youre responsible for helping it
out, right? Laws exist against running out on your kids, even
against sitting on an alimony check. So Dr F. doesnt stack up
too well against your basic alimony jumper, some of whom
have pretty good reasons for missing payments, and a lot of
whom love their kids even if they cant pay. But old Dr F.
turned his back on his sonsorry, his creaturethen lied to
him and tore apart the cut-and-paste Eve beast hed promised
to build him as a way of making up for his fatherly short-comings.
As Jumbo slept, I mulled this stuff. I hiked around the
room too keyed up to lie down and rest from nearly ten hours
of straight reading. Even in his reddest-eyed condition, Jumbos
daddy didnt have much on me. . . .
At practice that morning, Jumbo, Muscles,
and I all played like sleepwalkers. My backasswardsnessonce,
a double-play toss from Junior bounced off my left titall
went back to my rereading of Frankenstein. Jumbos slipshod play
had a like explanation. Hed stayed out of our room to let me
read.
But Musselwhites lousy play puzzled metill I saw
LaRaina Pharram sitting next to Phoebe in the left-field
bleachers. Miss LaRaina wore a dress of orange, red, and white,
like a lion leaping into a sunset full of cockatoos. She gave
Muscles the eye and shifted around so her easel-splash dress
whipped about her calves and pulled tight across her thighs.
No wonder Muscles couldnt motor. Hed probably been busier
last night than I had.
Oh, puh-leeze! Phoebe said a few minutes into this
show. Act yore age, Mama!
Mind how you talk, Miss LaRaina said amiably.
Phoebe got up and stalked all the way from the bleachers
to the Hellbender dugout. After talking to Phoebe, Mister
JayMac stood on the dugout step and yelled, LaRaina, go
home! Youre distracting the troops!
Couldve fooled me, Miss LaRaina yelled back. A flat
Cokes got more fizz than this sorry crew! But after blowing a
kiss off her palm at Muscles (to Reese Curridens chagrin), she
seized her pocketbook and sashayed out of view.
Finally, Mister JayMac whistled us in. Yall stink today,
he said. I doubt you could field a tumbleweed with a tennis
net. A few of yall need deodorizing worsen the Highbridge
sewage-treatment plant. Go home. Tomorrows another day,
but itd better be bettern this one or Ill sell yall to Johnny
Sayigh and move to Cuba. He stomped off.
After practice, Phoebe met Jumbo and me in the parking
lot at the Brown Bomber. She had on overalls, bebop shoes,
and a floppy short-sleeved shirt that made her arms look as
snappable as day-lily stalks.
Come to dinner with Mama and me on Friday after the
Marble Springs game, she said. Mama said I could ask.
The invitation surprised me. It confused me a little too. I
held the back of my hand to Jumbos stomach to ask if Phoebe
meant him too.
Phoebe blushed. I was asking you, Danny, she said. It,
well, it wouldnt . . . She stared at her bebops.
From the bus, a rude farting sound and ugly laughter.
Jumbo said, It wouldnt look good for a bachelor to visit
your house while your fathers still abroad.
Her daddys not a broad! Turkey Sloan shouted out the
nearest window. Hes a captain!
Will you come? Phoebe asked me.
Ack. Id already had one dinner with Phoebe and her
mama, and it hadnt exactly gone down like an oyster on a slide
of bourbon. Also, when Miss LaRaina wondered what kissing
Jumbo would be like, Phoebed said, Mama, thats vile! But
what, when shed cried that, had worried her morethe health
of her folks marriage or the foulness of Jumbos looks? Shed
really broadcast mixed signals on that one.
Accept her invitation, Jumbo said.
Miss LaRaina, at the curb in a gray 38 Pontiac, mashed
her hornonce, twice. Phoebe peered at me, half pleading but
more than a smidgen peeved.
He accepts, Jumbo said. Dont you, Daniel? His
hand seized the back of my skull. Out of Phoebes view, he
pushed my head forwards and, with a yank on my hair, tugged
it back to upright. Then he let go.
After Fridays game then, Phoebe said. Well give you
a ride soons youve showered. She sort of skipped towards her
mamas smoky old Pontiac.
The Bomber carried us Hellbenders back to McKissic
House. A crew of them razzed me about Phoebe, but Darius
kept as quiet as a gambler computing blackjack odds.
Here. Jumbo put his journal on my
desk. Youve copied the first part of my log in your own
hand. He put my notebook down beside the log. Continue.
Act as my amanuensis, and copy the rest. One day, you can
corroborate a story few would otherwise believe.
Seeing the log and my notebook together embarrassed
me, but I opened them and began reading the log where Id left
off, at Jumbos resurrection in the ice cave. With his blessing, I
copied this new material as I read.
From Remorse to Self-Respect:
My Second Life
At the commencement of my new life, as throughout my old one, bitter
cold scant afflicted me. I preferred it to the warmth of summer, responding to
it as an assemblage of pistons, flywheels, and cogs responds to lubrication. My
chief hindrance lay not in meteorological conditions, but in the body of my
dead creator. I felt an obligation to keep it with me as both a macabre
talisman and a relic of loathsome veneration. Wheresoever I ventured, I
carried Frankenstein with me, initially slung over my shoulder or under my
arm, but later arrayed on a sledge dressed with evergreen boughs, a rude
travels, that I fastened by a barken harness to my waist and pulled, as a bride
goes before her wedding train. Unlike a bride, I sought to deflect attention
from my passage and so invariably travelled by night, frequently through thick
forests or over rugged terrain. More than once, after a violent spill, I had to
retrieve my passenger and lash him more firmly to his carrier.
What thoughts I hadwhat overriding goalI cannot fully recall. I
understood, I think, that in my second advent I had no more hope of gathering
companions or of confounding likely foes than I had known in the unholy
year of my first reign. Thus, I wandered the most remote and desolate places
of Siberia, eschewing any human contact but availing myself of every chance
to study the habits of the strange beings whose lands I traipsed.
As a result, having first mastered a language by eavesdropping on
another drilling in French, I quite early added to my repertoire not only
English and German, but also the curious Hyperborean tongues of the Kets,
the Yukaghirs, the Luorawetians, and the Gilyaks. To these I added the
dialects of other peoples scattered about the fjords and inlets of the Arctic
Circle, not excluding the two chief dialects of the Innuits, or Esquimaux,
across the Chukchi Sea in North America.
During one blizzard I took shelter in a hovel roofed with tundra
blocks, chinked with peat moss, and protected on the northeast by gnarled
cedars. In the dugouts only room, the skeleton of a Cossack trapper, who had
starved to death, kept me grinning company. I grew fonder of this mute lodger
than I had ever been of Frankenstein, for I had no memory of abuse at his
hands or of contumely from his lips. The corpses got on well, however, and I
rejoiced in their undemonstrative friendship. Neither protested when I took the
hovels only table as my desk.
Soon afterwards, I coaxed a corroded lamp into operation with oil
from a covered bucket. With sufficient light to work by, I began to indite in
my counterfeit of Waltons cursive the texts of his epistles to Mrs Saville. As
an icy northern siroc keened over the dugout, I scribbled for hours without
respite.
Occasionally I paused to replenish the oil in my lamp or my paper
from the stores of the Caliban. Several times, aghast at the indiscriminate
rapaciousness of my hunger, I made a meal of stringy dried meatfish,
fowl, or mammal, I neither knew nor caredpurloined from a smokehouse
earlier in my travels. Insofar as I knew diurnality, I finished my copy in
sixor seven days and slumped across the table in a stupor of exhaustion.
Why such fever-blighted labour? Unless I discharged the obligations of
my previous life, I felt, I could never turn the promise of my new incarnation
to aught but catastrophe. That way I had already journeyed. I owed the ghost
of Captain Walton my gratitude. In trying to tell his sister Mrs Saville of
his activities, he had set down in all its grisly particulars the tale of my
creation. He had also left a chronicle of my rejection and my subsequent
career as a pitiless Fury. This record of my dashed hopes and my shameful
crimes would henceforth lesson me. My debt to Walton for producing it
demanded that I repay him by sending to Mrs Saville the letters, or legible
copies of the letters, comprising that tale. Thus I had determined in the first
lucid moments after my lightning-prodded rebirth. Perhaps selfishly, I had
also resolved to claim the original documents as my own.
Dispatching even my copies of these epistles to Mrs Saville proved a
formidable undertaking. I had sheltered miles from human habitation. No
post-road or port was readily accessible. However, the unfortunate Cossack
who had excavated the dugout had situated it near a river that hastened
turbulently beneath a skin of ice to a bay on the Siberian Sea. With difficulty,
I followed this frozen waterway to a bayside settlement, hauling on my
travois my desiccated and indurate creator.
This settlement harboured between two glacial cliffs near the cold seas
jewel-green waters. On the western escarpment, I took up my observations of
the mercantile activity below. At night I prowled like a phantom among the
rude shops and barracks fronting the water. During my reconnoiterings, I
heard a bearded Kit in sealskin leggings call the village Janalach.
A Russian vessel lay at anchor in the bay. Fully rigged and masted, its
sails were furled in horizontal cocoons. It had wintered in Janalach. Its
captain and sailors patiently awaited the brief Siberian summer and the
short-lived retreat of the ice. Cossack seamen and Yakut nomads conferred
amid the mud- and slush-defiled streets with Yukaghir traders, a polyglot
scene both festive and fraught with disaccord. The suns wan eye had thawed
not only the harbour ice but also the heretofore frozen hatreds and cupidities of
all those gathered there. I witnessed quarrels, cozenings, fisticuffs, and
sanguinary mayhem. That Frankenstein had viewed my behaviour as singular and
tantamount to depraved began to impress me as a provincial narrowness of
vision. Had he never remarked the reprehensible doings of his own kind?
Soon I became aware that a speculator of Scottish descent had voyaged
aboard the Russian ship, the Tamyr Princess, to this bleak coast. The
Cossack sailors called him Angus Ross, pronouncing his family name Roos,
as if he had ties to their motherland more binding than the crassly mercantile.
They also chaffed him about his ruddy face and his unruly muttonchop
whiskers. Ross habitually answered with a swearing surliness that they rightly
took as bluster. His Russian was of the inept pidgen variety that provoked
further ridicule and general merriment. The sailors, it seemed, viewed him as
their mascot. He got on better with the Yukaghirs in Janalach than did most
of the Russians, however, and, despite his brusqueness, rarely fell into a
serious quarrel with anyone.
I once ventured close enough to witness Rosss dealings with a Yaket
clansman working a movable forge in the lean-to of a smithy. The smith
converted various metal articles supplied by the sailorsbelt buckles, fisk
hooks, hatch rings, and so forthinto cooking wares and weapons for his
tribespeople, trading animals skins and trinkets for the wherewithal of his
craft.
Ross bartered crisply with the Yaket for a set of small metal polar
bears. The smith would accept nothing for them, as, I surmised, Ross had
known from the outset of their negotiations, but the old pistol wedged in his
belt. The works of the pistol had long since rusted, and its trigger would not
pull. At last, however, the men made their trade, whereupon the Yaket stoked
the engine of his forge and proceeded to work from the flintlocks barrel a
handsome tobacco pipe. Ross watched the process (as did I, albeit
clandestinely), with evident appreciation of the smiths handiwork. Soon, after
all, the nomad who acquired the pipe must return to Janalach for tobacco.
Upon quitting the lean-to, Ross walked to a set-apart jumble of
boulders near the water. To gloat, perhaps, over his booty, he disposed himself
on a rock and arranged his iron figurines upon it between his legs, as a child
would deploy a regiment of tin soldiers. I approached Ross from behind,
covered his mouth and muttonchops, and impelled him irresistibly to his back;
his toys fell like dominos. Ross essayed a scream, which my hand muffled.
Additionally, the backwards force I imparted to his chin warned that further
struggle would snap his neck. I regretted the subterfuge, but deemed it
necessary to quiet him. He subsided beneath me, the horror engendered by my
countenance evident in the wildness of his eyes.
When do you return to your own country? I asked Ross in English.
What manner of creature are you? he replied, when I provisionally
unstopped his mouth. Why this attack?
Because only you among all those gathered here speaks the language in
which I now address you, I said.
Then for the first time I curse my birthplace, Ross whispered. Pray,
let me go.
When do you next plan to visit your homeland?
In the fall, Ross said. As soon after the Tamyr
Princess has put in at Murmansk as I may book passage.
Passage to where? I asked.
I have family in Kirkcaldy upon whom I have not laid eyes in five
years, he said. I pray that I am not to be denied a chance to see them again,
ever.
I wish you no harm, Angus Ross of Kirkcaldy. Rather, I desire from
you a not unreasonable boon.
I am at your service. At this confession, I smiled, perhaps for the
first time since my rebirth; the Scot drew away from my smile as if from an
unsheathed dagger. Pray, sir, tell me what you would have me do.
First, Mr Ross, what I ask, I ask for anothers sake. Also, I have
waylaid you as I have because I well know the hateful, even violent response
that my unforeseen appearance among your kind everywhere excites.
Through gritted teeth Ross said, That I understand.
I released him. He made no move to bolt, and I put a finger to my
lips. Know, I whispered, that once you leave here, sworn to secrecy about
both your charge and its author, I have no power to guarantee your faithfulness
to it. Should you abandon the task, you need fear neither my following
curse nor the eternal prospect of retribution. What I ask, I trust you to do
from a sense of honour.
A mighty trust, said Ross, whether to commend or belittle it I could
not tell. He deposited his figurines in a bag of waterproof fishskin. I, in turn,
took from my pocket the letters that I wanted Ross to deliver to Mrs Saville. I
outlined for him his charge and gave him the packet. Although I could hardly
enforce his compliance, I asked that he refrain from trumpeting any word of
our talk or even of his unexpected meeting with me here in Janalach.
But who are you? Ross asked. Aye, what are you?
Because you have agreed to carry these letters, I give you leave to read
them, I said. They explain, not always fairly or compassionately, what I
do not choose to reiterate on this dreary shore. Fare thee well, Mr Ross. I
thank you in advance for the brave accomplishment of your errand. With
that, I leapt away into a nearby crevice and scaled its chimney, for atop the
cliff I had hidden my sire in a fortress of glacial debris.
Ross, I observed, stood rooted to the spot where I had accosted him.
Had he imagined my unlikely manifestation? At length the packet in his
hands persuaded him otherwise, and he ambled bemusedly back into the
company of men.
As I learned years later, Ross fulfilled his humanitarian charge. The
letters entrusted to himnay, my copies of those lettershe delivered to
Mrs Saville, a neighbour of the Godwins in Holburn, on his trip home to
Kirkcaldy. Later, in a quest for solace, Mrs Saville passed them along to a
member of that family, either to peruse and destroy or to bring out under the
imprimatur of M. J. Godwin & Co.
Ross had told Wiltons sister that he had received the copied letters from
a giant much resembling the creature delineated therein. Mrs Saville, knowing
the handwriting for a good but imperfect forgery of her brothers, rejected the
Scotsmans tale and his letters as a cruel hoax. She had long ago deduced, and
resigned herself to the fact, of Captain Waltons death. For his part, William
Godwin, author of Enquiry Concerning Political Justice and the
novel Caleb Williams, could not steel himself either to destroy or to publish
the peculiar manuscript passed along to him by his second wife, the erstwhile
Mary Jane Clairmont.
Almost by default, the letters fell into the keeping of the adolescent
Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin, a young woman of enormous wit, independence,
and energy. She regarded Waltons letters as a cabalistic document of
Promethean consequence. Even before her elopement to the Continent with
the married poet, Percy Bysshe Shelley, in the summer of 1814, she had
struggled to shape a readable story from these materials. Almost four years
later, having reworked and abridged my copies of the letters, Mary allowed
them, with more revisions by her husband, to appear anonymously in three
small volumes from the little-regarded publishing house of Lackington,
Hughes, Harding, Mavor, & Jones.
Some literary historians have contended that this novel burst upon
the world without an acknowledged author because Mrs Shelley feared either
that reviewers would never believe a woman her age the originator of such a
brutal and abhorrent tale or that her notoriety as a wanton and unorthodox,
even anarchic, female would poison its reception and sales. I offer a simpler
reason for the absence of the authors name from the title page: Mrs Shelley,
though she introduced certain clarifying changes into the manuscript, neither
conceived the story nor wrote it. The text of Frankenstein indisputably
reveals its author to be the late Robert Walton. On the other hand, because
that text consists largely of my creators partisan recitation of his own
biography, even Walton deserves little credit beyond that due any conscientious
scribe or amanuensis. In a sense, the books title simultaneously reveals its
author. Why, then, would a person of Mrs Shelleys talent and probity wish
to recommend herself as the fountainhead of this monstrous story?
Initially, of course, she did not. Later, however, when the book created
a nationwide stir, prompting a writer in Blackwoods to put forward his
sincere wishes for the putative authors future happiness, thereby forgiving
Mrs Shelley her unconventional past, it became harder to insist upon her role
as an editor and ever more tempting to embrace the work as wholly the
product of her own philosophical musings and storytelling proclivities. In
1831, this temptation led her to elaborate upon her husbands mood-setting
fiction of the ghost-story-writing competition at the Villa Diodati in the
summer of 1816. Further, she irrevocably acknowledged authorship of
Frankenstein by allowing the publishers of the revised edition of 1832 to
feature prominently on its title page her name. Perhaps the fact that in the
fourteen years between the two editions she had published three novels of her
own, along with many accomplished incidental writings, effectively obscured
for her the actual genesis of the work. Mrs Shelley suffered much in her heroic
life, from the high-minded betrayals of her most cherished loved ones as well as
from the untimely deaths of her husband and all but one of her children.
Thus, I do not anathematise her for claiming unassisted creatorship of the one
titleThe Last Man, fine as it is, does not qualifythat enrolled her
among the immortals.
Quitting Janalach, I blessedly had no foreknowledge of the events that
would carry my distorted biography to the world. I wished only to atone for
the crimes of my past life and to discover in my second incarnation a place of
at least marginal acceptance. The necessity to hide, to make certain salubrious
changes in myself as well as discreet contacts among the tribespeople of the ice
coasts and the taiga, required discipline and fortitude. I hiked east, sustaining
myself on lichens, bog moss, and the leaves and spring fruit of several different
kinds of stunted shrubs. I made skis of larchwood and built myself a movable
blind of mammoth bones and evergreen foliage. The blind enabled me to skirt
the encampments of nomads, and the fluid edges of reindeer herds, without
betraying to either man or beast my presence in or near their environs.
After several months travel and the overmastering of many hardships,
however, two Chukchi hunters caught me traversing a barren expanse of
tundra and let fly at me from their compound bows a barrage of arrows.
That I dragged a travois and attired myself as a human being enraged rather
than conciliated them. I had trespassed their demense, and my size convicted
me as a likely scourge of their hunting grounds.
Two arrows struck home, their walrus-ivory points embedding themselves
in my flesh, one above my hip and the other in my calf. I roared
bitterly. I menaced the bowmen with broad semaphoring gestures. Uncowed,
they muttered unintelligibly, perhaps disappointedly, before retreating out of
sight beyond a fluted sastruga.
Thus abandoned, I sought to minister to my wounds. I snapped off the
arrow shafts and removed my leggings to expose the embedded points. In this
half-naked state, I would have presented a prodigiously vulnerable target, had
my Chukchi tormentors returned with reinforcements. I made haste, then, to
dislodge the ivory barbs with the tip of a skinning knife. The pain was slight,
but a copious oozing of pale blood accompanied this surgery. With spruce resin
and rags I dressed my wounds. Then, lame and sore, I drew on my leggings
and retreated several miles to an orphaned copse of cedars. Therein I erected a
hut of branches and sailcloth in which to mull my outcast state and to recoup
my vigour.
This recoupment, although at the time I hardly knew it, protracted into
a hibernation akin to my death sleep in the ice cavern far to the west. A
blizzard stormed and departed. The twilit autumn turned to night. I may
have had some imperfect consciousness of times passage, but in my womblike
shelter, the lashing of the sleet, the lamentations of the wind, and the brink
starlight strewn above the grove chimed in me as inward rather than outer
phenomena. In my stupefaction I reposed much as a salmon, stunned by the
cuff of a bear and twitching on a rock, would nonetheless intuit its fate.
Eventually, I awoke to ice, snow, and uncouth Aeolian music. My
wounds had healed. Revitalised, I fought clear of my wintry entombment and
journeyed again towards the Utopia of my innocent fancy. . . .
At dinner, Curriden griped Kizzyd put baking soda instead
of baking powder into her biscuits. (Or vice versa.) They
looked like baby cow flops and tasted like carbon-paper
ashes.
Mrs Lorrows has had an off day, Jumbo defended her.
Uh-uh, Kizzy said. But I sometimes has a tumble day
when the likes of yall jabbers yo ugly spite.
Mr Curriden has had an off day too, Jumbo said.
These biscuits could drop an ox, Curriden said. From
the inside or out, eaten or thrown.
From here on out, Mister Reese, Kizzy said, pointing a
witchy finger at him, pray God I dont pyson yo tea.
I scrambled back upstairs to find my place in Jumbos log,
and the argument in the kitchenthe feudgot louder. Soon,
though, I was hip-deep in Jumbos autobiography, and the
noisy dipsy-do downstairs might as wellve originated in Zanzibar.
I no longer heard it.
My Second Life (Continued)
Initially without aim or plan, I wandered the
coldest and least-known wildernesses of Siberia, from its northernmost bays
to the sparse taiga forests of the Kolyma Mountains, and many other remote
locales besides. Why did I live?
At length I found reasons: to atone for the murders I had committed as
Frankensteins outcast get; to discover a suitable resting place for my late
progenitor; to enter human society as a worthy and productive citizen.
Vain hopes!
The cold agreed with me, as I have said, and I had little trouble
sustaining myself even on thin soups of such despised vegetable matter as
lichens, bark, evergreen needles, moss, and the tubercules and roots of many an
unprepossessing shrub. As one item in my continuing penance, I had resolved
never to eat flesh again, and had perfectly heeded this self-commandment.
Other opportunities for atonement seldom arose, however, and I began to sink
into a lonely despondency inimical to my most basic goals.
The body of my creator ever posed a difficulty, acting as an impediment
to my travels, aimless though they were. By now, it had suffered much
from exposure to the elements and from fluctuations of temperature. Frankensteins
once handsome face, albeit pallid from inward struggle and his final
illness, now resembled that of a tortoise. His nose suggested a beak, his mouth
a V-shaped scar, his throat a desiccated wattle. During a brief period of
inattention, I had allowed a magpie to pluck out one of his frozen eyeballs;
the other had oozed away over days of blindingnor do I use the word in
jestsunshine.
Owing to the ambient cold (unremitting but for these bright interludes),
the decay process in him advanced by staggers. Although his body never
emitted an insupportable odour, only on the iciest days was it altogether free
of a sickly perfume. At such times, his limbs had the hardness of gun barrels;
at the Siberian summers height, however, they flopped like a rag dolls and by
such movements wafted their attenuated stench.
Oh, Frankenstein! I once apostrophised him. Is this how I honour
you? Is this how I justify myself in your sightless gaze?
As both thinking creature and nomad, I lacked direction. The place
most likely to accept and hallow my progenitors bones, the city of Geneva,
stood leagues and leagues away. I had no idea how many. It might as well
have nestled in a lunar vale, for how, without divine aid, could I reach either
Switzerland or the moon?
Often I thought to slip my burden and to pay homage to my maker by
setting out his remains on some wind-blown promontory, where eagles or
wolves could reverence his spirit through the machinery of their appetites.
Frankenstein had loved the Alps, their glacial majesty and their vistas of
desolate loveliness. In my creators belated obsequies, could not the icescapes
and mountains of eastern Siberia serve as either emblems or proxies of the
Alps? Although I hoped so, the strictness of my call to atonement argued the
reverse.
At length, however, I discovered for him on an inlet of the Chukchi Sea
a temporary resting place, a grotto of stone which I further concealed with
driftwood and glacial rubbish, where I could safely cache his body during my
rambles afield. By this expedient, I preserved not only that which persisted
of his corpse, but also my freedom as a moral agent.
Why, my hypothetical reader may inquire, did I
remain in the Siberian wilderness without soliciting the companionship of
men? In one regard, the question is foolish, for my treatment by the human
species, from Victor Frankenstein himself to the Chukchi bowmen of a more
recent encounter, had little inclined me to trust it. In another regard, however,
the question demands an answer, for I had fixed as one of my goals my own
domestication and socialisation. The process could not fulfill itself if, confining
my rambles to remote wastelands, I shunned even the most glancing impingement
on members of my creators race.
Nothing had occurred, I understood, to render my physique or my
hideous facial features less alarming to human beings. Indeed, these attributes
had turned even Frankenstein against me. His genius had succumbed to his
weakness of soul; he had repudiated me almost in the instant of my first
emergence into consciousness. I still had a powerful recollection of that
moment: the chemical-stained hands of my maker and the flicker of ineffable
disgust in his eyes. Unhappily, my deformed countenance, still provoking fear,
would prevent others from compassionating me. Even had my face shone as
comely as Apollos, my great size would always speak to the timid or the
wary my undeniable potential for inflicting ruin. The universal policy of men
towards me, then, bad founded itself on either flight or preemptive recourse to
a garbled Golden Rule, namely, Do unto Frankensteins creature
what it unquestionably purposes for thee.
Therefore, I practised and took pride in caution. I inwardly celebrated
my ability, honed in Switzerland and the Orkneys, to come within a whisper
of my human prey without alerting it, or others, to my menacing proximity.
Now, however, I intended no threat. I told myself that my stealthiness
facilitated observation when, in fact, it had become habitual, a means whereby
I evaded natural human commerce and further inured myself to solitude.
Intellectual diversionbe it reading, games, debate, or philosophical
contemplationshad completely fled my world; day by day, I devolved
toward the instinctive mindlessness of the timber wolf or the snow owl.
A fortuitous encounter, involving no human beings at all, put a halt to
this bestial slide. As aimlessly I worked my way along the icy palisades on the
Bering Strait, I heard the clamorous voices of mating walruses. This passionate
baying, at once like the barking of dogs and the squealing of swine, echoed
from the cliff side rocks, I sought its source. Before long, I had clambered to a
throne of barnacled granite downwind from the sea beasts rookery.
From this perch, I had a hidden view of the harem and of the sultanic
male treading a young female, lie bellowed his triumphant ecstasy. His
lovemaking impressed me with both its ardour and its violence, for it hardly
seemed that the pinned sultana could derive any pleasure from her paramours
coercive affections. On the other hand, she may have relished her role as his
and the other females cynosure; thus, she periodically barked her doubtful
rapture. The females unoccupied with either procreation or the establishment of
a pecking hierarchy tended their wet-eyed pups.
All this I absorbed with the greatest curiosity, irritation, and excitement.
Shamefacedly, I confess that I considered attempting to cuckold the bull
with one of his concubines. The feat struck me as possible but riskful: I might
incur a tusk wound. If his massiveness were any trustworthy measure,
however, the king walrus must weigh five times as much as I. Thus, he had
not my nimbleness or speed, and the rookery was large. An ingenious rogue
might well swyve a lady or two at sufficient distance from him to escape
either interruption or injury.
I seriously entertained this notion, unnatural as my maker or his
murdered bride would have adjudged it, because the yearning in my loins had
produced a persistent tumidity; I ached with bittersweet excruciations impossible
to describe. At last (appalled by the image of myself in coitus with a
bewhiskered, legless, fish-eating sloth), I foreswore the temptation and spilled
my lavalike seed on a rock.
Call me Onan.
My lust momentarily deflected, I took more acute note of the walrus
society apart from the rutting couple. It charmed and enchanted me. The
mothers and their pups displayed a sweet, reciprocal affection, the beholding of
which retrieved and intensified the rage I had felt in the Orkney Islands at my
creators destruction of the female companion he had promised to make for me.
Like nearly every other sentient being, I had known loneliness well ahead of
lust. My desire for friendship, the consoling warmth of a propinquitous body,
antedated and so took precedence over the mating urge. With the mothers and
pups of this rookery at least, a kindred longing had found at once its natural
outlet and its satisfaction. I envied the affectionate creatures.
In my envy, my rage subsided. Frankenstein was dead. How, then,
expect him to build me a wife? Furthermore, as I must soon or late
acknowledge, no one else could accomplish that same miracle. I must abandon
by degrees my self-exile and seek a female companion among the children of
men. Or, given the vast unlikelihood of success in that endeavour, I must
embrace self-control and reform my character. These changes, I hoped, would
lubricate my introduction into the human community. As part of it, my
gentleness and honesty established, I might draw to me the companion of all
my longings. Or I might not. In either event, I had determined to quit
the wilds and to embark upon a career as a devout philanthropist.
I owed this turnabout to a revelation on the edge of a breeding pround
of walruses. Perhaps I had shamed myself there, but I had also come into
harmony with the repressed aspirations of my higher natre. Who can
condemn me? Who can demand more?
The sequent era of my life became the happiest I have yet known. As it
unfolded, I lacked the inclination to chronicle even its chief events. Thus,
I seldom wrote here of either the people or the quotidian occupations that
persuaded me I had found my niche in human society. In truth, what I did
write I long ago ripped from this log and sank in a polarbear skull in
Kotzebue Sound, as latter-day Alaskans now call the inlet. I here reprise
this part of my earthly career, in an abridgement painful to indite, to shew
the connection between my early resurrection self and the
semireclusive citizen I later became.
For sixty or seventy years, I dwelt with a small population of alternately
maritime and inland Innuit, a people whom the Cossacks and other Europeans
call Esquimaux. I reached them by stealing an oomiak, or whaleboat,
from a trading outpost on the easternmost tip of the Chukchi Peninsula and
sailing it across miles of open water in the Bering Strait to an icy spit
near present-day Shishmaref. My creator, exhumed from his grotto on the
eastern side, sailed with me, but his limited contributions to our crossing
scarcely warrant inscribing him on the manifest as a crewman.
Once across, I hiked westward, dragging my maker on yet another travois,
until chancing upon a village near a river southeast of a vast inlet. I had
skirted many such villages, but this one recommended itself to me by the
cleanliness and symmetry of its houses, fish-drying stands, and sled racks,
and by the animation and good humour of its people.
Let me call the village Oongpek for the snowy-owl totem displayed on its
chief kazgi, or mens lodge, and the people themselves the Oongpekmut
after the name of their village. I have no wish to identify more specifically
either the place or its inhabitants, who numbered about forty persons and
comprised five or six families related by consanguinity or marriage. Oongpek,
I determined, would well serve as my adoptive homeplace, and after many a
careful survey of the village, I strove to insinuate myself into it as an ally
and denizen.
The Oogpekmut at first regarded me with a suspicion as relentless as
that of the Chukchi hunters who had wounded me in Siberia. Dread
commingled with this suspicion. The villagers beheld me as if I were an evil
spirit given form and substance. I had appeared to them with my travois
behind me, and the corpse upon it little advanced my cause. Although I
addressed them in Yoopik, their own tongue, pledging to add to their food
stores and to protect them from enemies, whether animal or human, my
friendly overtures foundered on their startlement and disbelief. I wanted
companions, and a place of only moderate esteem in their collective. At length,
however, my evident docility and their mounting impatience with my presence
gave them courage, and they chased me away with harpoons and clubs.
Insofar as I could do so, I altered my appearance to approximate more
closely their own. I cut my hair at the nape and around the ears to resemble
the bowl-like coiffures of the men. I perforated my lower face at each lip
corner to make possible the insertion of labrets, stone or ivory ornaments
curiously evocative of walrus tusks. I made my labrets of creek stones and
wore them daily until I could tolerate their chaffing and pull. I retailored my
overshirt, leggings, and boots after the local masculine fashion. I made toys of
spruce or willow wood for the village children, storyknives for the girls and
carven animals for the boys.
On my next visit to Oongpek, I left my dead creator in a tree and
appeared to the villagers gift-laden and familiarly dressed. I placed my gifts at
Oongpeks edge and danced in the succulent summer grass a modest dance of
appeasement and petition. I meantime chanted the conciliatory words of a
song of my own authorship. The children greatly desired to collect their bribes,
and some of the younger adults seemed to look upon my renewed overtures with
favour, if not with unmitigated delight. The village angalgook, or
medicine man, who wore as an amulet the mummified remains of a human
infant, reviled me as a trickster, an evil bear in the guise of a deranged giant.
Two well-respected hunters concurred in supposing it unsafe to allow me any
nearer approach. Indeed, the Oongpekmut hectically debated the nature of my
identity, agreeing only that trusting my words might invite general
destruction.
Asvek, the medicine man, claimed that his counterpart in a distant
village had sent me to forestall an attack of the Oongpekmut upon that village.
The other angalgooks people had abducted a local woman in a raid, owing to
an ancient feud, and so Asvek contended that the enemy shaman had transformed
a diseased bear into the hideous spirit oracle that sought now to deceive
Oongpeks people. After this pronouncement, no one could concede that I
might mean my words or that I had come to them free of my imperfect
disguise as a man. Once again, then, the villagers whose companionship I
desired drove me away.
I persevered. As shortly after my creation I had done with the De
Lacey family in Switzerland, I became the secret benefactor of this group of
Innuit. I did them various unsolicited kindnesses, from providing them with
plant foodat best, a marginal part of their dietto repairing their fishing
nets and sealskin boats. Later, I rescued a small child who had wandered
unattended into a kenneling area and fallen between the paws of a hungry
sledge dog. Braving the possibility of another attack, I walked the child back
into the village to her sisters and cousins. When I passed the smiling child into
their care, I reiterated to them and several nearby adults my kindly feelings
and my honourable intentions towards all the Oongpekmut. I also disclosed
myself as the mysterious benefactor about whom much superstitious
speculation had arisen.
By degrees, then, these words and acts brought me into the compass of
local regard, including even that of the shaman Asvek. I was allowed to stay
for longer and longer periods. When I explained that the corpse I had brought
with me belonged to my makernot my father, as they first wished to
interpret my words, but one who had alchemically fashioned me from potions,
powders, and revitalised fleshAsvek and the other Oongpek elders expressed
relief as well as astonishment. If the man who had made me lay dead, then I
was undoubtedly not the handiwork of a living enemy: I had power over my
creator, rather than he over me, and that power I could use, as I had
repeatedly sworn to do, on behalf of Oongpek. It also cheered the villagers to
note that the mummified Frankenstein little resembled his walking creation.
That I had kept his body with me for a trek of thousands of miles,
however, struck these Innuit as a risible indulgence. The devotion I showed his
corpse impressed them as eccentric, if not unhealthy, for they mused but little
on the afterlife, in which they believed implicitly, and sometimes disposed of
their dead by leaving them out for wolves. This method obviated any excavation
of the frozen tundra and declared to the animal world their feelings of
sacred fellowship. It nonetheless appalled me. I much preferred the alternative
method of bidding farewell practised by most of the Oongpekmut; namely, the
scaffolding of the deceased on platforms in the woods, the bodies wrapped in
skins and joined on their death journeys by such favourite belongings as
kayaks, bolas, harpoons, and sled frames.
Beyond the letters I had taken off the Caliban, I had few of my
creators personal effects. Indeed, on the Chukchi Peninsula he had lost even
his eyes. When I found that ravens, owls, or bears might yet eat the dead laid
out on platforms, I rejected even that option for Frankenstein. Together,
however, the Oongpekmut and I hit upon a method for sanctifying his body
that offended neither their sensibilities nor mine. We lacquered him from head
to foot with an ointment of seal oil and evergreen resin and sewed him into a
caribou hide. This funeral package we carried many leagues to a Stygian
chamber in a volcanic cave, outside of which we chanted songs of praise,
farewell, and godspeed.
This duty accomplished, I assimilated myself with the aid of my hosts into
Oongpeks enjoyable round of days. I relaxed my vegetarianism virtually
to the point of denying it, nor do I see how I could have remained among these
Esquimauxthe word means eaters of meatwithout adopting this
immemorial component of their behaviour. On the grounds of necessity, I
forgave myself, for the Innuit had no formal agriculture and thus no ready
way to accommodate the rare visitor who spurned their wonted diet.
Further, and additional balm to my conscience, these Oongpekmut sang
or prayed to the creatures they hunted, using them with the utmost esteem, if
not actual reverence, and so ritually abstracted their meat-eating from the
profane practises of Europeans.
As I had early sworn to do, I dedicated myself to the welfare of
Oongpek and strove diligently on its behalf as hunter, fisherman, kayak
wright, net mender, arrow fletcher, and guardian, I thereby obtained the
respect and admiration of my adoptive villagers. With them I knew a
contentment that had once seemed as ungraspable as frostfire.
Owing to my size, the people called me Takooka, grizzly bear. Because I religiously
declined to shew myself either to Innuit visitors or to any white-skinned
trader or surveyor, they also called me Inyookootuk, the Hiding Man.
And because I reminded some villagers of a mythical creature, the worm man,
that had lived when beasts could change at will into people, others addressed
me as Tisikpook. Takooka was by far the most common of my appellatives,
but I answered to them all. Indeed, I delighted in the fact that I, a creature
once either nameless or marked out exclusively by deprecatory epithets, now
had more names than any of my fellows.
In time I became such a stalwart Oongpekmut that no one complained
of or saw as improper my dalliance with one of the villages unattached
women, a small, sturdy person with strong hands and eyes like sparkling
stars. Owing to the redness agleam in her hair, the people called her Kariak,
or red fox, and she never shied from my attentions. I lay with her, took her to
wife, and established with her in a sod house with whalebone roof joists our
own domicile. My brother-in-law had wanted us to move into a house with
his family, but his wife had argued with considerable justice that a man of my
size needed more room. Kariak concurred, and I excavated our new house,
with the aid of many other Oongpekmut, to accommodate just the two of us,
with room for additional sleeping benches for the children we purposed. I loved
this woman, and she in turn loved me, taking a perverse joy in the fact that to
make me a parka, or a set of leggings, or a pair of boots, required twice as
many caribou skins as any other male Oongpekmut needed for those items.
Our great love notwithstanding, my union with Kariak proved the
groundlessness of one of my creators bleakest fears. His chief ethical concern
in crofting me a brideindeed, his rationale for tearing my intended
companion to pieces before animating herwas that together we might
propagate a race of devils. This conjectural species, Frankenstein believed,
would turn its perfidious energies to the indiscriminate elimination of
humanity. He need not have feared. Kariak and I conceived no children. Our
clanspeople at first attributed this failure to her, for the Innuit suppose
infertility a female imperfection-unless someone can shew that a malignant
shaman has thrown a spell or that the seed of another man could quicken the
childless womans womb. Kariak and I had no conspicuous ill-wishers,
however, and although Esquimaux husbands sometimes invite male visitors to
enjoy, as a form of hospitality, the bodies of their wives, never did I consent to
this custom, so possessive was my love and so vehement my uxoriousness. In
truth, only in these traits did I offend the Oongpekmut, but they overlooked
my shortcomings on account of the services I daily rendered. Further,
Oongpik had acquired a reputation as impervious to attack, evil spells, and
famine. If anyone begrudged my possessive behaviour, it was Kariak.
Saying so, I acknowledge, may appear to convict my wife of a fickle
heart, perhaps even of faithlessness, but the charge dies aborning. Among the
Innuit, children confer status and security. They greatly bless their parents, at
first with the flattering exactions of their dependency and later with the active
succour of their hands. In hunting, fishing, cooking, sewing, bow-making, and
a hundred other enterprises, they make their value plain. It therefore bruised
Kariaks heart to continue childless, and the gibes of her distaff kindred, as
perfunctory and mild as they were, grew ever more difficult to bear. She had
already suffered many jocose insults, a few of which had nonetheless stung, for
marrying so grotesque an interloper, even if I had proved a beneficent
influence on the community as a whole. Abruptly, then, Kariak began to
badger me to offer her to kinsmen visiting from elsewhere, as a sign of my full
adoption of Innuit ways and of my unimpeachable cordiality.
Again and again, I declined. Instead, I carved from ivory a doll-child only
slightly bigger than my hand, as a petition to the inyua, or spirits, and
as a charm. This doll Kariak and I dressed and tended as if it were a living
infant, feeding it forest celery, wild potatoes, and even a delicacy of porcupine,
crushed salmonberries, and seal oil known as agoutak. None of these
ministrations served to impregnate Kariak, however, and her unhappiness
grew. Once I arrived home from an expedition for snowshoe hare (during
which these creatures had moved about as thick as tomcod in the brush) to find
that she had broken our doll-child and thrown it onto a midden. I bent to
nuzzle her red-tinged hair, but she pushed me away and wept copiously.
A few days later, three seal hunters from Shishmaref, one a kinsman of
Asvek, came to Oongpekfor a visit. Kariak asked me to permit at least one of
them to lodge with us during their stay. I refused. I did not wish to share my
wife with anyone, much less any of these laughing strangers; further, I
intended to absent myself from the village for the whole of their visit. I would
play Inyookootuk, the Hiding Man, by retreating to the woods. It would
mock propriety for Kariak to entertain a male visitor in our house during my
absence, which Asvek or Kegloonek, a respected elder, would impute to my
desire to lay out a pattern of game snares.
As soon as she understood my intentions, Kariak moved out of our
lodge, dry-eyed in her leaving, and crossed the Oongpek commons to the house
of her sisters husband. Here, I learned upon my return, she entertained the
most dashing member of the Shishmaref party, a full-faced young hunter with
happy-dancing eyes. She then departed with him for the coast. Nine moons
later, on a night of popping ice sleeves and wolf-cry winds, Kariak brought
into the circle of another clan a baby boy with eyes greatly like his fathers.
Weeks later this news reached my brother-in-law, and everyone in Oongpek
understood what it signified: I, Takooka, was sterile, and Kariak, my erstwhile
wife, had endured the malediction barren, even if often hurled
in jest, for my prides sake.
Oddly, the happiness that her kinspeople now felt for Kariak overrode
any resentment of me for the injusticein which, in fact, many of them had
conspiredthat I had done her. No one sought either to punish me for
humiliating her or to taunt me for my infecundity.
I remained among the Oongpekmut as a bachelor in the clan of my
departed wife. Another in my place might have suffered a diminishment of
status, but I had qualities that offset my shame. No other local woman
wanted me for a husband, but I did not lack for willing lovers.
Two years later, Kariak returned with her new husband and her
bright-eyed son for a visit. At the urging of Kasgoolik, the husband, I lay
again with my first and last heartmate, and, at the moment of our little
dying, laughed heartily in her small embrace. The bittersweetness of this
possession without possession prevented me from accepting any further invitations
from Kasgoolik during their visit; and when Kariak and her family,
after a weeks sojourn, returned to his village, I never saw her more.
Oh, Frankenstein (I often thereafter lamented), for this you destroyed
my first bride, that I might not sire upon her a race of Titanic murderers.
But suppose, fiend, that your seed had in fact impregnated a female
made after your own pattern? (I have imagined my maker replying). That
was hardly a chance in which I could easily, if ever, acquiesce.
My stay among the Oongpekmut, happy but for the loss of Kariak,
lengthened into decades. I heard of troubles elsewheremost notably, between
the Azyagmut and the Cossacks at Fort Saint Michaelbut my people
eschewed active dealings with outsiders and so escaped the anxiety and the
physical harm of these periodic upheavals. I heard, too, of the smallpox
epidemic that had swept through many Innuit villages, killing hundreds, but
the disease never reached our village, and the only Oongpekmut to die of it
contracted the pox on a visit to Egavik, on Norton Sound, and died there, far
from home.
By and large, I still declined to appear to anyone other than my own
clanspeople, especially Europeans, whom I could trust only to imprecate and
abuse me, had they the means to do so. When a small team of white doctors
came to Oongpek to vaccinate our people against the pox, I removed myself
from the village and stayed away until it had completed its program and
departed. When traders arrived, I fled.
However, in more than one disagreement with nearby Innuit, I
effected an outcome both just and favourable to Oongpek simply by shewing
myself to our would-be adversaries, as the Philistines had no doubt employed
Goliath until his fatal contretemps with David. In this way, as well as in the
faithfulness of my service to my clans people, I attained to an almost
legendary status among the Esquimaux of my circumscribed region.
The Hiding Man, Inyookootuk, lives in Oongpek, hunters would
say. He is a man. He is a bear. He can change back and forth like inyua
from the ice days.
As the years flew, I observed the effects of time on my clanspeople and
friends. Asvek died. Asveks wife died. The chief Kegloonek died. Other
villagers advanced from youth or middle age into senescence and death. I, on
the other hand, did not, but remained, as I always had, a giant of a certain
established maturity, ill-featured but neither decrepit nor wizened. Kariaks
parents died. Kariaks brother drowned in a whaling accident involving an
oomiak and a wayward harpoon line. Seal hunters and salmon fishers of the
age group that had initiated and taught me fell one by onelike leaves in
autumnto accident, disease, and age.
That I appeared immune to these natural depredations, continuing
youthful in my hideousness, did not go unremarked. Many Oongpekmut,
especially those of generations subsequent to mine, regarded my persistence
among them as uncanny, perhaps even malignantly so. I watched in dismay
as they ineluctably withdrew from me their trust and affections. No one used
me ill or commanded me to quit the village, but I soon perceived that what
had hitherto existed between me and the industrious Oongpekmut could not
last.
Further, I could no longer tolerate the cold as well as I once had; each
succeeding winter seemed to add to the ice in my veins, to diminish my ability
to warm myself when blizzards raged and the urine in our collection barrels
froze into amber stelea. On my sleeping platform, at the height of the blasting
siroc, I dreamt of sunshine, unruffled water, and lizards basking. These
images won my reverence even though I could scarcely conceive their origin.
One day an old man calling himself Kasgoolik appeared in our village.
He had journeyed many difficult leagues by dog sledge to tell me something.
At length I realised that he was the husband of my former consort, Kariak.
Kariak, he said, had died.
Inconsolable in his reemergent grief, he wept to relay this message,
which struck me with the accreting weight of an avalanche. I, too, wished to
weepto pound my head on the frozen earth, to rend my garments like a
Hebrew. Instead, I sought to console Kasgoolik, who, knowing that I had
loved Kariak unflaggingly, with a devotion equal to his own, had travelled all
this way to share his grief.
How strange, he observed, that over forty-five years had passed since
Kariak had shared a household with me here in Oongpek. Why, their own
first son had vanished nearly thirteen winters ago, carried out to sea on an ice
floe and never seen anywhere near his village again.
This intelligence also desolated me, as if a child of my own loins had
disappeared.
A month later I abandoned Oongpek. If I could not die, then I had world
enough and time to drink the indilute elixir of life. After one brief
stop, I directed my steps southwards, slowly but inexorably out of the
Alaskan mists.
After reading Jumbos story, I couldnt
much concentrate on baseball. No, thats wrong. I dived into
baseball like a guy with money worries dives into suicide, to
escape whats about to overwhelm him. I played pretty good in
our next five games, but their details come back to me only if I
check a box score. On the afternoon of our second game
against the Seminoles, I tried to return Jumbo his log. Id had
all the lousy copying work I wanted for a while.
Keep it, Daniel. He stuck his log into the hold of my
school desk. Learn all you can about me.
I shook my head, but Jumbo leaned his knuckles on my
desk and held its lid in place. Meanwhile, I thought: I dont
want to know any more about you, I already know too much.
Copy out the rest of my memoir, Jumbo said. Gradually,
over our remaining season.
Jumbo wanted me for a confessor as well as a friend. A dummy, after all,
has a few things in common with a priestfor starters,
you can tell either one the worst about yourself
with no fear theyll yak it all over town.
Anyway, we beat Marble Springs that Thursday and then
again on the Friday evening Jumbo gave me his resurrection
memoir. The box scores say I played fine: no errors in either
game, five hits in eight at bats, six RBIs. The same box scores
say Jumbo, although a defensive hero, went aught for seven,
with a rally-killing roller to the Seminole first baseman on
Thursday and a base-running blunder on Friday after reaching
first on a walk. Fortunately, Heggie, Snow, Muscles, and I took
up the hitting slack. Maybe Jumbos uncertainty about what to
expect of me, now I knew his amazing personal history, had
nagged him, a blackberry seed under the gum.
After Fridays gamethe better of my two sockdolager
nightsI was supposed to go to Miss LaRaina and Phoebes
for dinner. In front of every rabbit-eared Hellbender aboard
the Brown Bomber, Phoebe had invited me. In a way, it qualified
as a date, a real dateunlike the dinner at the Royal Hotel
with Mister JayMac and the Pharram women.
Anyway, as soon as Id showered, Curriden, Manani, and
a couple of othersnone known to me as an enemycongratulated
me on my game. Curriden had a brown paper sack in
one hand and a grin on his handsome kisser. As I knotted my
tie, he pushed me down onto a bench and eased in beside me.
Know what this is, Boles? He wagged his paper sack
under my nose. I shook my head. Well, have a look. He
peeled the sides of the sack down to reveal a flask-sized bottle
of sloe gin. And have you a drink too.
Hes underage, Mariani said.
Yeah and Rita Hayworths a Campfire Girl. Curriden
pressed his ruby-colored liquor on me again. Didnt you see
how he played?
I took the sack, but twisted the top closed around its
neck. Mister JayMac allowed only rubbing alcohol in the locker
room.
Countrys in a whiskey drought, Curriden said. You
almost got to be wearing khaki to find a goddamn beer. This
stuffs rare as radium. Take a swig.
You deserve it, Charlie Snow said. It aint cheap stuff
either, like Old Spud or hanky-filtered Vitalis.
Snows good word did it for me. If he thought I deserved
a snort, I probably did. I peeled the paper down, twisted the
cap off, and sipped. My lips began to tingle, but I liked the
stuff well enough to take an even bigger hit, which made even
the doubtful Mariani say, Atta way to do er, kid!
I recrimped the sack and gave the bottle back to Curriden,
my mouth still atingle with the furry bittersweetness of
sloe berries. A fire ran from my tongue to my gut.
Youre eating with the Pharram ladies tonight, right?
Yeah, well, Curriden said, youve got to give em an hour or
so to get set. Meantime, come along with Quip and Vito and
me on a little victory jaunt.
Phoebed said to meet her under the grandstand after the
game so Curridens plans seemed wrong to mebut maybe he
knew something I didnt.
Its okay, Dumuh, Danny. Well get you to the Pharram
place in a hour. Drop you right at their door. Taxi rides
on memy gift for what youve helped us do, kid. He looked
at the eight or nine Hellbenders still in the locker room.
Were four games over .500! he shouted. Thanks to Dumbo
and his hustlin rookie pals!
I blushed and took another slug of Curridens contraband firewater.
Look, Reese, Parris said. Same damn color as your
gin.
My color stayed high. The furry tingle in my mouth
caught an elevator and rode to my brain. I wasnt drunk, but I
was already close to tipsy. Even so, when Curriden, Parris, and
Mariani whisked me out to the parking lot, skirting the area
where Phoebed planned to meet me, it felt WRONG. Sure,
Curridend never had it in for me, and it did seem logical
Phoebed need some time after the game to get ready. But these
rascals had kidnapped me.
Parris and Mariani had me wedged between them in the
back seat of a red-and-white taxi. Curriden sat up front, playing
fingertip drumrolls on the dash and giving directions. The
Strip, I heard him say. The Wing and Thigh. The stadium
sank away behind us like a three-masted ship going under the
concealing arc of the world.
The streets boogie-woogied with energy. News of our
win had run through tony white and run-down colored neighborhoods
alike. Our driver, a horse-faced black man, yelled out
the window at some of his friends on a street corner: Gang
way! Got me some mighty Hellbenders hyeah! Gang way, yall!
Hush that, Curriden said. Were incognito tonight.
What you really mean, I thought, is, itd embarrass us all
to the bottoms of our pocketbooks if Mister JayMac learned
of our destination and slapped us all with fines. The tingle in
my brain shredded into a dozen throbbing aches.
We drove past the farmers market and crossed the tracks
between the business district to the north and the neon-lit part
of Penticuff Strip to the south. Our driver hung a right on the
eastern side of the tracks. The alley straight aheada tunnel
of jazzy electric signs and uniformed GIsopened out like a
Mardi Gras party.
Jesus, lookit all the sojers, Mariani said.
Parris said, Be nice to em and theyll let you live.
The driver dropped us off in front of an eatery serving
fried chicken and cole slaw: The Wing & Thigh. In its window
someoned pasted up movie posters and flyers recruiting farm
workersvolunteersfor the fall harvest. Curriden led me,
Mariani, and Parris into The Wing & Thigh.
The place had the length and width of two or three
railway coaches, with a counter down one side and ten or
twelve tables against the facing wall. In the back, through the
smoke eeling over the tables, a shaky staircase rose to a rickety
landing; below it, a red EXIT sign glowed over the beaded
curtain in the door there. A jukebox blared Bing Crosbys
White Christmas, but the smells of boiled turnip greens,
pepper sauce, and frying chicken didnt much remind me of
yuletide fixings. It was July, even if just barely.
Dont you want a piece? Curriden asked me.
Uh-uh. In another hour, Id be eating with the Pharrams.
Well, I do, Curriden said. Order up, Vito. He
handed Mariani a fiverDiamond Jim Brady tipping the
doorman. Order us three he-man plates, with cole slaw, chips,
and iced tea, and give me my change when I get back.
Where you goin? Parris asked. His sing-song suggested
he already knew. To get Danny his piece?
Curriden grabbed my shirt front and pulled me through
that beer-sloshed alley, with its stink of vinegar and fry scald,
towards the staircase. GIs looked up from their tables, and
some of the gals eating chicken with them, as silk-gussied a
bunch as Id ever seen, their fingers shiny with joint fat, winked
at me or reached out to pinch my flank. Mama wouldve called
em hussies, and I already had a hunchjust a hunchhow
The Wing & Thigh had got its name.
Beyond the door at the top of the landing was another set
of stairs, flush with the outside rear wall, that climbed to an
access hall right over The Wing & Thighs kitchen and serving
area. In that hallway, Curriden and I came to a desk mannedwomanned,
I meanby a female in an ivory dress with a push-up
bodice and an oval cutout that showed her belly button.
Dont ask me to describe her face.
Do for you gennelmen? she said.
For Danny Boy here, Curriden said, my little brother.
To the womans right, some paired hooks with number
tags on themlike youd see in a barber shopran on a strip
of fluted molding nailed up at shoulder height. Each pair of
hooks had a womans name over it, but four of the names had
tags reading Not Available on them.
Flossie, Jordan Kaye, Roberta, Sabrina, and Irene are all
in this evening, the woman said.
Give him Sabrina, Curriden said.
Here. The woman handed him No. 26 from the take
hook under Sabrinas name. Payment, please. Curriden paid.
Now yall may go down the hall to wait.
So Curriden and I wove our way down the long corridor.
It was furnished with four scummy fish tanks on hospital carts,
calendar paintings of old plantation houses, and a worn strip
of plum-colored rug. We passed several doors and entered a
waiting rooma holding tank, more likewith folding chairs
and a low table stacked with magazines.
Three soldiers sat in this room. No one talked or read a
magazine. Two GIs looked bored. One had a nervous jiggle in
his leg. Curriden and I sat down next to him. This PFC had a
rash of razor nicks under his receding chin. He cut his eyes at
us, then smiled real big.
Gonna wear her out. Gonna do my steel-driving level
best to split er clean in two.
The corporal sitting next to him said, Be lucky he dont
pop a knee before he gets in there.
Ha ha, said the PFC. What a kidder.
Just then, it sledgehammered me Id come to a brothelI
mean, Id taken in all the accouterments, but now I understood
Curriden meant to see me through a rite of passage. He caught
me by the shirt and pulled me back down.
Down the hall, a door opened across from one of the fish
tanks; a man in khaki strolled towards me to the waiting room,
looked in at the five of us, and said, Number twenty-five for
Sabrina. Lady says shes off at nine, whether her trick is or
not. He checked his watch. I got eight till.
Sabrina, the PFC said. Whoa, thats me! He flashed
his tag and stood up. For the first time since wed entered, the
floor stopped vibrating. Ill do her three times in eight minutes.
Shell be hanging on for dear life.
Curriden grabbed the guys number and gave him a wadded-up
dollar bill. Pick a gal who dont get off till later. Lifes
too short to rush things.
Hey, gimme my number!
Uh-uh. Curriden tipped him back into his chair with a
soft three-fingered push and led me down the hall to Sabrina.
The GI didnt follow ushe had an extra buck and more sense
than to mess with a guy as big and built as Curriden.
In the bulb-lit fish tank across from Sabrinas roomall
the light in the hall came from these tanks, dapples of cool
aquamarine on the walls and floorthe fish swam in hypnotized
and hypnotizing schools: fish with stripes or spots, fish
with lacy wedding-gown fins and tails, fish with see-through
skins and bones aglow like tiny Christmas trees.
Curriden knocked, the door opened. Out of the corner
of my eye I saw a brunette, pale-skinned woman about my own
height wearing a yoke-collared shirt with a Johnny Mack
Brown bib and pearly buttons for a housecoat. Under that
shirt, legs like pruning shears. Red-orange polish on her toe-nails.
Curriden gave her extra money. Sabrina, Danny Boles.
Danny, Sabrina Loveburn. Vito, Quip, and Ill be downstairs
eating, kid. Have you a time.
Im off at nine, Sabrina said as Curriden walked away.
Not for what I just gave you, hon. Sides, hes like to go
off fastern a firecracker. Have a heart,
Come in, then, Miss Loveburn said.
I stared at her toenails and might notve moved at all if a
clatter of shoes on the stairs and a barrage of male voices
hadnt goosed me to it. Just as a gang of four soldiers burst
through the door at the end of the hall, I stepped into Miss
Loveburns room. She shut the door. The GIs knocked on
every door in the hall, including hers.
So yore a ballplayer, she said. One that dont talk.
Curriden had told her, maybe even before we showed up.
I didnt even try to answer. Her room had a low, narrow
bedmore like a couch with no back or armsa folding
chair, a pole lamp, and a door across from the one Id entered
by. Like prairie dogs, the ladies of The Wing & Thigh had at
least two exits from their burrows.
Over Miss Loveburns bed hung a glossy oil portrait of a
Tahitian or a Samoan maiden in a sarong, with one brown
breast showing. The sun going down behind her had exactly
the same plump roundness as her nude breast.
Miss Loveburns violet eyes halted their gaze at the top of
my skin. She was semipretty, with the looks of a pissed-off
school teacher. If she hadnt been birthday-suit-skinny under
her Johnny Mack Brown shirt, I couldve imagined her sitting
tight-kneed in a Baptist church pew.
Give me ballplayers over sojers, she said. Especially if
theyve just played a game. Not too many of yall pass up a
shower afterwards. A GI, though, you never know about. Some
come in smelling like cologne factories, some like geedee goat
stalls, pardon my French. If theyve scrubbed with a clean
washrag, yore luckys bout the best you can hope for,
barring a campwide flu and the weekend off.
Miss Loveburn let her gaze drill into my skin. Cmere.
This aint something you can do by phone. She shook her
head. If you dont talk, of course, bout the only thing you can
do by phone is dial it, right? Or listen maybe. You look like a
decent nough listener. Cmere. Lemme smell ya.
All her talkd taken most of the scare out of Miss Sabrina
Loveburn. I went to her. She put her hands on my shoulders
and sniffed me under the chin and around the ears, a dog going
over its owners trouser legs after a cats been by. While she
smelled me, I sniffed her hairwavy burn-brown wool. It
smelt of cigarette smoke and talc. I liked it.
Not bad, Miss Loveburn said. Kinda little kiddyish.
She went from my ears to my breastbone and from there over
to my arm pit, sniffing from one spot to another. Shower or
no, yore starting to get a smidgen ripe about here. She
slipped her hands under my arms and stood straight up.
What do I expect, huh? A young he-fella cliding wi the
climate. S okay, though. Youll do.
She sniffed my mouth. Smoke already, huh? Shouldnt.
She lifted my lip, to let the air polish my canines. Turn these
pearlies yeller. Least you dont chew. Got a little hunger on
yore breath, though. You hungry?
I had a dinner date, but Miss Loveburn wouldnt let go of
my shoulders.
Turnabout, she said. You say what swampy perfumes
come off me bout now. Fairs fair.
To oblige, I smelt her forehead and eyebrows: talc, stale
smoke, woman sweat, the oils of long-gone lovers. All pretty
faint, nothing too foul. But from the roomfrom her beda
rancider smell fanned out: sweat, stained linens, downstairs
cooking.
But you caint say, can you? Never met a dummy beforenot
sure I believe in em. Lemme see. Open. She prised up
my lip again and got me to open wide, then loosened the knot
on my tie and peered into my mouth. Relax. This is okay.
You aint a gift horse, are you? Given who paid, Im liker to
qualify. No looking in mine, though. Fairs fair, but smarts
smart and wise is wise. She put the tip of one finger on my
tongue. Lips okay. Tongue okay. She probed with a finger. I
had to warn myself not to chomp down. Throat okay. Vocal
cords, ah, ah, open, keep it open, ah, I caint even see em.
Someone cut em out? Yank em like burnt-through wiring?
I shook my head.
Then why this speechlessness, honey? It dont become a
young man of yore achievements. Miss Loveburn walked me
to the bed, where she tugged me to a sitting position on her
right hand. Sitting, she lost the coverage till then afforded by
the tail of her shirt. I saw the smooth white cables of her
thighs, the dark bird-nest tangle at their join. I could feel her
warmth. Until that moment, nothing about The Wing &
Thigh as a fancy house or Sabrina Loveburn as one of its
women had brought me anywhere near horniness, but I reached
it sitting there, and she noticed.
Spare me yore flusterment, Danny. Ive raised the dead. For feisty young
rams like you, all Ive got to dos breathe. Anyhow, nothing happens till I
say the word. I put my hand on Miss Loveburns beautiful knee. I leaned
into her and nibbled her throat. Tonight, Danny boy, yore Open Sesame aint
Reeses money or any ol guppy nibbles. You gotta say, Love ya, hon,
or Shut my mouf. Otherwise, its no go. I dont sell to
cripsone-arms, hair-lips, dummiesas Reese hissef knows.
So tell me you love me, Danl.
Ooooi. Mama, God, and the please-and-thank-you morality of Tenkiller
meant about as much to me just then as the
prose on a mattress tag. I wanted Miss Loveburn under me, her
cowboy shirt hiked to her greyhound-lean rib cage, her legs
slicing me into smaller and smaller satisfied pieces.
I love you, I whispered. (I could whisperPumphrey
hadnt stolen my ability to whisper.)
Loud-talk it! Miss Loveburn said. Say it right out!
But to do that, I needed a diagram of all the fleshy parts
in my throat and instructions for making them twang.
Shore its a lie. If you loved me, Id get me to a nunnery. But you
have to say itsomethingto prove Im not peddling
myself to a draft-dodging crip. Got that?
I got it okay, but no matter how hard I triedcurling my
tongue, gulping airI managed only voiceless stammers.
Uh-uh. That wont do.
I kept trying, straining like a cur with a bone in its throat.
A Nazi wouldve taken pity; a Jap, even. Finally I stopped
trying, shoved Miss Loveburn over, and wedged one knee
between her legs. Did it count as rape if you tried to have your
way with an ass-for-hire whod taken money and then set
conditions that had nothing to do with her price or the exact
bedroom yahoo level shed tolerate?
Stop it, Danl! Im warning you!
She raised a knee into my crotch, hard, but the slam was a
billiard kiss off one ball. To keep her from using her knee
again, I rolled my hips and pubic bone down on her and
smoodged a hungry kiss over her lips, chin, and jaw.
Then a boulder fell out of the sky and crushed the back
of my skull into a backasswards sort of headache powder.
I woke up alone. A folded hand towel
cushioned my head, and the weapon Miss Loveburnd used to
brain mea glass ash tray with a Wing & Thigh decal inside it
rested on my chest like some kind of weird volume knob. I
turned it with one shaky hand; pain boomed inside my head
from ear to ear.
Somebodyd moved me from Miss Loveburns cubicle to
a low couch in a hallway almost exactly like the one with the
fish tanks and calendar paintingsexcept it had only a bare
wood floor and exposed ductwork under its ceiling. I sat up
and looked around. The doors along this corridor hinted it ran
parallel to the one down the other side of The Wing & Thighs
horizontal-refreshment boxes. I could hear some refreshment
going onthumps, moans, happy criesbeyond the door at
the foot of my couch.
How you feelin, sweety? A fortyish woman dressed like
a USO hostessstylish, propertouched the lump on the
back of my head. You look right chipper, considerin.
I winced away. The hurt and bafflement on my face
kicked her into den-mother mode. She said her girlsas well
trained in self-defense as in bedroom artsreserved force as an
option if impatient Johns tried to git tough.
Gitting tough undercuts the agreement freely agreed to
by both parties with the exchange of our standard fee, she
said. You tried to git tough. Sabrina couldve had you dumped
in the alley, but it hurt her to think of sech a dummy tenderfoot
coming to out back. So you got to sleep off yore mickeyshe
nodded at my ashtrayrigh chere, sweety.
Five doors away, a beefy-faced man leaned against the
wall with his arms crossed and his biceps agleam. He gave me a
chin dip and a smile more sorrowful than mean.
Im Fidelia Florida Foxworthy, the woman said. Sabrina
had some business to tend to elsewhere. We couldnt
leave you where you was layin, sweety, cause Mamie had to take
over in there. And we couldnt take you down to yore pals
cause its not smart to show off a client with a head knot. So
Burleyshe nodded at the bouncertold yore pals youd
had sech a fine time with Sabby, you wanted to try out another
gal or two at yore own expense.
This story panicked me. I brought my wrist up to my ear
like a man listening to a watch ticking.
I dont wear one either, Miss Fidelia said. Burley, what
time you got?
The bouncer checked his watch. Quawduhaffatin. His
voice rolled like a tidal wave of honey.
My God, Id missed dinner with Phoebe and her mama! I
likely didnt even have Curriden and his buddies waiting for
me. Worse, unless you had an extension from Mister JayMac,
curfew on the night before a game was eleven. Id never get to
the Pharrams to apologize and back to McKissic House before
the clock bonged eleven and my transportationtaxi, hay
wagon, biketurned into a pumpkin!
I grabbed the nearest door knob and tried to yank open
the door attached to it. The door wouldnt yank.
Caint go in there, sweety, Miss Fidelia said. Mamies
working. Theyre all working. Or better be.
I jumped onto the couch, hurried over it, stepped down,
and wiggled the next door knob on the row of cubicles. It
didnt budge either. I dashed to the next door and rattled its
knob.
Burley! Burley, stop him! Miss Fidelia cried.
Burley came pelting down the hall after me, Jell-O-wobbly
love handles rolling faster than his voice had. Id just
about used up all available knobs before one turned, a door
clicked open, and, falling down, I barged into the cubicle behind
it, landing crash on a rope rug and scrambling back up as
Burley grabbed the door and hit his ear on the jamb when his
grip on the knob reversed his momentum.
On the bed in this room, I just had time to see, a Wing &
Thigh gal in a halter top and denim cutoffs using her lipstick
tube to transform her clients moony white butt into a winking
Popeye the Sailor. My entrance put an end to this end-directed
artwork. The girl screamed and sidearmed her lipstick tube at
me. Her Johns Popeye the Sailor face rolled over, popping his
Fighting Red cock and balls, color by Tussey Cosmetics, into
view along with his face. His eyes bugged out round and white
as his ass cheeks, then narrowed again.
Burley collided with the girl in the halter top as I yanked
the far door open and careened into a fish tank on a hospital
cart. The cart rolled a foot or two, but caught on the rug and
bucked to a halt. The tank kept going. It crashed down, shattering
and spilling ten gallons of algae-ridden liquid murk and
two pounds of tropical fish. The rug acted like a blotter, and
the beached fish hiccupped along its waterlogged strip like a
silver conga line.
Stop, you damned liddle peckerwood! Burley shouted.
I hopscotched over the crumpled aquarium tank, the fish,
the broken glass, beelining it towards the doorkeepers desk and
the door to freedom.
What the hell! shouted the victim of Popeye interruptus
in the hanky-panky cubicle. What the fuckin hell!
I squeezed past the doorkeeper and double-timed it down
the stairs. At the landing below Miss Fidelias cathouse proper
(or improper), I had a choice. I could go through the lefthand
door into the eatery, or I could xylophone down the stairs into
a storage room with an exit on a service alley. I chose the door
back insidesafety in numbers.
But witnesses or no, Burley clattered into The Wing &
Thigh in pursuit. Four dogfaces had chosen that moment to
come up the same stairs. I slipped between or edged around
them all, then sprinted down the row of crowded tables to the
one where I hoped Curriden and friends would still sit sucking
marrow from their chicken bones. Ha. I should have hoped
Tojo would yield his imperial forces to me personally.
Grab that peckerwood! Burley shouted, jiggling through
the crush. Thatun wid the goddamn ears!
A GI on the first floor caught me by the forearm. Where
you goin, Dumbo? Hed thought up this nickname for me all
by himself.
Burley barreled up and knocked the dogface loopy with a
pudgy elbow. Thanks, Mac. He took my neck tie in his fist.
Morons in my custiddy now. You can toodle-oo.
Phoebed hate me forever. Id never make curfew. Hell,
my life could peter out in a trash-filled alley. Burley began to
drag me towards the rear. Folks waved bye-bye as he hauled me
past, a guy putting the come-along on a scared terrier.
Please be so kind as to unhand my friend.
Burley and I turned around. Jumbo stood in the middle
of the place in his Abraham Lincoln frock coat and a pair of
black trousers large enough to outfit three or four regulation-size
groomsmen. His face wouldve stopped Big Ben. It
blanched the lip rouge of a half dozen females and sucked in
the cheeks of a whole platoon of doughboys.
Who the hellre you? Burley didnt quailIll give him
thatbut his voice pitched itself oddly high.
Henry, Jumbo said. Henry Clerval.
Henry, Burley said. Oh, Henry.
Careful, fella, a GI told Burley. S Hank Clerval, the
best first baseman in the CVL. He said this with such respect
that CVL almost seemed a vowelless code for Clerval, like
YHWH is for Jehovah.
I dont watch it, Burley said. Baseball.
Well, he could crack you like an aigg, the GI said. He
inhales pickaninnies for breakfuss.
That last is a damnable lie, Jumbo said.
Sorry, the GI said. Swear to God, sir, Im sorry.
Henry, Burley mused. A simpering Henry.
Let go of Daniel, Jumbo said, but Burley kept his grip
on my tie, which snaked over my shoulder, pulling my head
towards him on a hurtful cant. What has he done to incur
your anger or to warrant punishment?
The question stumped Burley for a moment. All Id tried
to do was take what Curridend paid for (now, though, the
memory of my attack on Miss Loveburn filled me with self-shudders)
and then flee The Wing & Thigh upon learning the
time: attempted rape and a missed dinner engagement.
He . . . he broke a fish tank, Burley said.
You were taking him back upstairs to mend it?
No, I was hauling him out back to kick his scrawny ass,
Burley said. Does the peckerwood look like a tank mender?
I would think your boss happier with financial restitution
than with an injured customer, a lawsuit, and a court order
closing this establishment as a leach upon both the pocketbook
and the morality of the American soldier.
Burley had a brain. He let go of my tie, and I walked with
as much dignity as I could muster to Jumbos side.
Henry is an honorable name, he said. Men of the
stature of Adams, Longfellow, and Ford have worn it. Another
Clerval, an altogether admirable gentleman, gave it to me.
Dont mock or disparage the name Henry.
Nosir, Burley said seriously. I wont.
Jumbono, Henrytook his wallet from his coat and
counted out ten bills. He handed them to me. I gave them to
Burley.
Is the sum sufficient to replace your broken tank and to
restock it with fish? Henry asked.
Yessir. You want a receipt?
No, thank you. These people herehe gestured at the
crowd around uswill attest to the mutual acceptability of
Daniels payment. I may assume that, maynt I?
Shore, several chippies and GIs chorused: You bet.
Jumbono, Henry!guided me outside, where Highbridges
nightly ripoff of Mardi Gras partied past, soldiers on
the prowl, hookers come-hithering, con artists flim-flamming,
and MPs (the dogfaces called them Miserable Pricks) strutting
like tinpot dictators.
A taxi stood at the curb. Henry put me into it and told
the driver, McKissic House. We rode. How did I find you?
he asked as the neon tide of Penticuff Strip lapped the cabs
windshield. Well, Mr Curriden and his friends arrived back
at the boardinghouse without you, after Id heard that youd
left the stadium in their company. Phoebe telephoned to say
you hadnt yet arrived at her house. One by one, I accosted all
three gentlemen last seen with you. Mr Curriden laughed. Mr
Parris said youd slipped away from them early in the evening.
Mr Mariani confessed the ulterior motive behind your expedition
and told me where they had abandoned you.
Abandoned me? Curriden and his pals had deliberately run
out on me?
Henry put a hand on my knee. So how does it feel to
have shed your innocence? His fingers dug into my knee,
nearly to the point of making me scream, then let go.
Im sorry, he said. Others plotted your filthy quest.
They victimized you, Daniel, denying you your humanity and
also your autonomy as a sentient creature. About when I
thought hed let me off the hook, he grabbed my leg again.
But youat length, Daniel, youtook part in your own
abasement. What does autonomy mean if not self-sponsorship
in the moral arena?
I deserved the scolding. Sort of. For a few raw seconds up
there in The Wing & Thigh, Id become an animal; not so
much for wanting my libido scratchedhell, that was naturalas
for using force to bully my chosen scratcher. Id put the
screws on Sabrina Loveburn to get her to put the screw on me.
Funny thing. Sitting in that cab and listening to Henrys
harangue, I knew Id sinned against Miss Loveburn and deserved
my ashtray braining. But I resented her for trying to
make me talk and then reneging on her contract with Curriden.
(You pays your money, you gets your goods.) Shame and bitterness,
warring tides.
Young Miss Pharram says you stood her up, Henry
went on. As you might well anticipate, she is wounded, confused,
and resentful. (That made two of us, but Phoebe wasnt
to blame for my state of mind, as I was for hers.) How do you
suppose Miss LaRaina, given Phoebes wretchedness, must feel?
Equally wretched, of course. Equally ill-used.
Away from Penticuff Strip, our cab bumped over the
tracks dividing Highbridge. The smell of decaying horse and
mule droppings swirled around us, along with the stink of a
faraway paper mill and the floating scorch of peanuts from the
Goober Pride factory. The streets beyond the tracks wore their
late-night shadows like tank camouflage, and the folks creeping
among the dapplesno matter their racereminded me of
enemy snipers.
Discomfiting Miss LaRaina was Mr Curridens principal
goal, Henry told me, his eyes straight ahead. He harbors
no ill will towards you. He mayve actually supposed a paid
visit to The Wing and Thigh would reward you tangibly for
your play for the Hellbenders. On the other hand, he felt no
compunction about using you as a pawn in his scheme to hurt
Miss LaRaina by hurting her daughter. That the enterprise
might injure you and colossally grieve Miss Phoebe meant
nothing to him, beyond the turmoil it would inflict on Miss
LaRaina. I liked Mr Curriden before this. Tonight, however,
his name fills the rift in my heart with salt and ashes.
Henry sat mute until our cab turned onto Angus Road.
The joke on Mr Curriden is that his spitefulness ranks
him in my estimation below such louts as Messieurs Hoey,
Sloan, Sosebee, Sudikoff, and Evans. For all their bigotry, they
attack directly those who shame or offend them, not blameless
third parties with whom they have no quarrel. A moment
later, he said, The shameless louse.
Our cabby drove us right up to the columned front porch
of McKissic House. Lights shone in windows upstairs and
down, but you still got the feeling that, because wed arrived a
little after Mister JayMacs official curfew, the house would
devour us as soon as we entered.
Henry paid the taxi fare and tipped the cabby. He more
or less frog-marched me up the steps. At the door into the
foyer, he stopped and stared down at me.
You owe me a sawbuck for that fish tank, Danielone
debt I dont intend to forgive.
I had no trouble with that. I had the money. Besides, my
mind had flown back to a moment in The Wing & Thigh. The
face of the man with the Popeye-the-Sailor lipstick cartoon on his keister
was a face I knew. What the hell! What the fuckin hell!
Even the guys jangly voice had a familiar edge to it. But where
had I met him, and why would he want Popeyes homely mug
scribbled on his butt?
Do you hear me? Henry said.
I nodded, and we went inside.
Miss Tulipa and Colonel Elshtaind arrived
in their Hudson Terraplane on Friday afternoon, too late
to come to the game against the Seminoles. Miss Giselle had
met them and welcomed them into her and Mister JayMacs
bungalow. Their dust-covered vehicle, its tire treads caked with
red mud from an Alabama creek bottom, hunkered in front of
the place.
Daniel, youre looking fit as a soldier, Miss Tulipa said
in the gazebo near Hellbender Pond. Isnt he, Clyde?
Yes, the colonel said. He should be a soldier.
After breakfast, Darius had fetched me to the gazebo as a
neutral meeting spot. The Elshtains hadnt wanted to intrude
on the players lodgings, and no player, Darius said, had set
foot in Mister JayMacs house since its construction in the first
year of CVL playnot even such suspected favorites as Hoey,
Muscles, Snow, or my illustrious roomy, Jumbo Clerval.
Not Jumbo, Id wanted to tell Darius: Henry.
Your mamad beam to see you doing so well, Miss
Tulipa said. Hows your laryngitis?
To that point, Id got by with nods and head shakes,
grins and foot-shuffling. Shy fellas arent expected to talk
much. Now, though, I had to continue my charade or fess up
through a note or sign language. A bad case of laryngitis could
dog you for quite a while, couldnt it? I rubbed my throat and
sadly shook my head.
Pobrecito, Miss Tulipa said. What a trial for you.
I doubt its that vast a trial, Colonel Elshtain said.
Youre simply imagining yourself in the lads predicament.
Miss Tulipa looked the colonel hard in the eye. At the
moment, dear, Im imagining you in his predicament.
If you successfully wish laryngitis on me, Tulipa, well
have a damnably hard time singing Row, Row, Row Your Boat
in rounds on our drive home.
That made Tulipa smile. Clyde, go get Daniels gift
from his mother from the car, would you?
Colonel Elshtain clicked his heelsmaybe sarcasticallyand
left to do as bid.
Your mama misses you hugely, Miss Tulipa said. Good
heavens! A truly bizarre shape had begun to glide out of a
tree-lined inlet of Hellbender Pond, and she put a hand to her
heart like a movie actress whos supposed tove seen a ghost or
a moody mental figment of some sort. Then I reduced the
shape on the pond to something familiar.
On a page from the little notebook I carried, I printed, Its
just Henry my roomate in his kyyak.
Henry paddled his kayak out of the inlet towards us. His
upper body came out of its manhole like a smokestack on an
ocean liner. He almost seemed to be wearing the kayak, and it
sat so low in the pond, with mosquitoes and noseeums haloing
him, you feared it about to swamp or roll. It didnt, and Henry
dipped his double-bladed paddle this way and that with the
same hefty grace he swung a clutch of bats in the on-deck
circle. He noddedbut didnt wave or smileas the kayak
slid by. Then he sculled it towards the far shore and headed
into a flock of domestic ducks paddling out to meet him. He
balanced his paddle on the prow and bombarded the ducks
with handfuls of old cornbread.
Miss Tulipa couldnt get over the sight. Thats one of
those, uh, Eskimo-ish boats, isnt it?
I nodded, then tapped a cigarette out of my pack. Before
thinking to offer Miss Tulipa one, Id already lit up. She stared
dazedly across the water like a whalers wife yearning after her
long-gone hubbythen looked back at me with a funny goggle
of disappointment.
Good Lord, Daniel, whatre you doing?
I wanted to say, If Im old enough to earn my own money, Im old
enough to smoke, but my youth wasnt Miss Tulipas primary
objection. She snatched the cigarette, flipped it to the gazebos
decking, and ground it out with the toe of an ankle-strap
Wedgie.
You must have mayonnaise for brains, and its gone bad
in the sun. Nobody with laryngitis has any more business
smoking than a TB patient. Do you intend to grow polyps on
your vocal cords? To make your condition chronic?
Its already chronic, I thought, but I acted contrite and
sheepishly shook my head.
Colonel Elshtain returned from the Hudson with my gift
from Mama. Shed wrapped it in birthday paper, but the gifts
shape told me it was either 1) a fishing pole, 2) an ax handle,
or 3) a baseball bat. If pressed to guess, Idve marked 3) with
the smart-alecky confidence of a guy with a crib sheet.
In fact, Mama had sent me a bat, another Red Stix model.
I peeled it free of its paper and swung it a few times. Swinging
it gave me a peculiar heart twinge.
Coach Brandon wanted you to have it, Miss Tulipa
said. He gave it to your mama as soon as he learned you never
got to use the first one in a real CVL game. With a tender
smugness, Miss Tulipa watched me swing the red stick.
Doesnt Daniel look like a hitter, Clyde?
He is a hitterhis average proves it. But what he most
looks like to me is a combat infantryman.
Behave yourself, Clyde.
Out on the water, a duck settled on Henrys shoulder. He
fed it by hand. The ducks on the pond flapped and quacked
like unbribed city councilmen.
We look forward to seeing you play at shortstop. Miss
Tulipa stepped inside the arc of my biggest swing and kissed
me on the forehead. Thats from your mama.
A clatter arose from the pond. Two or three of Henrys
ducks, including a green-capped mallard, beat their way aboard
the kayak and assaulted Henry himself.
Dont be greedy! he yelled. Monsters!
The mallard got to Henrys head and began to tread him
with the zest of a feathered Romeo. In self-defense, Henry
knocked the mallard into a side-spin, grabbed his paddle, and
purposely rolled his kayak. The ducks scattered, veering off
towards the far shore or gooney-bird-walking the ruffled cocoa
scum to what their BB-shot brains assumed a safe distance.
Henry, with pure upper-body strength and the torque on his
paddle, righted the kayak in a fountain of glittery spray.
Impressive. Colonel Elshtain gave Henry a half-bow and
very lightly applauded his feat.
Care to join me? Henry called, hair and face dripping
and the kayak itself streaming.
Only as spectators this afternoon! the colonel shouted
back.
Ah, but the water wonderfully refreshes one on a day of
such oppressive heat. Henry paddled towards the chokegrass
and red-clover lawn stretching from the gazebo to the water.
This afternoon, Miss Tulipa said to me, get a hit or
two for your dear friends from Tenkiller. That request made,
she and the colonel retreated to their sister-in-laws house
before Henry could reach the shore.
The game that Saturday, the first of a
three-game series with Opelika, started at five. A Fourth of July
twin bill, with a barbecue in the parking lot as a special
attraction, would conclude the series on Sunday. Anyway, after
beaching his kayak and upending it on a pair of sawhorses near
the buggy house, Henry dressed out and walked with me to
McKissic Field about three hours in advance of the game.
Already, three funeral-home tents covered the barbecue
pits dug on the south side of the stadium. At least a dozen
workerssome black, some whitestoked the pits with
hickory, oak, and charcoal. Meantime, the headless carcasses of
three slick porkers sizzled in the pits, and a smell a thousand
times more tempting than the one from Goober Pride rose
above the canopies and the gunk-encrusted Brunswick-stew
pots.
Yankee Doodle Dandy, Henry said. Unfortunately,
Ive never been able to abide pork.
Maybe so, I thought, but when you were with the
Oongpekmut, you ate walrus, seal, sea lion, and beluga flesh.
None of that fishy offal couldve smelt half as good as our
barbecue.
The closer we got to the stadium, though, the odder
Mister JayMacs preparations for the Fourth began to seem.
Carpenters had built ramps from the parking lot to the concessions
area and from there to the box seats behind our dugout.
Just out of Tenkiller, Oklahoma, Id never seen a boardwalk in
my liferickety piers didnt convey the same flavorbut,
looking back, Id say these ramps had a lot in common with a
promenade among the dunes at a beach resort. Mister JayMacs
workers had used sheets of plywood instead of abutting planks,
though, and the crowds footfalls echoed like the hooves of
cattle. Is this a ballpark or a lumberyard? I wondered as Henry
and I entered. You could still hear hammering, and the whole
deal seemed such a helter-skelter rush job it mystifiedand
irritatedalmost everybody.
Mister JayMac met us near the batting cage.
Whats going on? Henry asked, nodding at the ramps and at the place
where the carpenters had built a barricade and hung a sign: NO
UNAUTHORIZED PERSONS BEYOND THIS POINT.
Temporary renovations, Mister JayMac said.
Why would you wish to renovate temporarily, sir?
Thats none of your damned business.
Henry looked stricken. Pardon me, he said sincerely.
Loose lips sink ships, Mister JayMac said. He rolled
out the bromide as a kind of half-assed apology, but quickly
turned on me. Well, I see Tulipas given you your bat, Mr
Boles. And a handsome, gaudy piece of timber it is. Too bad
you wont have a chance to break it in today.
My surprise showed on my face.
Put it in that rack, Mister JayMac said, pointing to the
dugout. When Id racked my bat, he said, And put your fanny
to that plank.
I sat down.
Henry, embarrassed for me, trotted out to right field to
play long toss with Knowles.
You dont play today, Mr Boles, Mister JayMac continued,
coming into the dugout. You broke curfew. You
pulled a jilt on my grandniece, who went to no little trouble to
fix you dinner. Breaking curfew gets you benched. Jilting Phoeb
earns you my contempt. Have you two strong words to say in
your own pitiful defense?
I shook my head.
Good. Because even if you could say it, Mr Boles, I
wouldnt care a good rip to hear it. Care to know the third
reason youve forfeited a chance to play before Tulipa and her
husband, folks whod carry eye-witness word of your exploits
to your mother?
I just stared.
No, I dont imagine you would. Nonetheless, Mr Boles,
you shall know it. In company with three men who should
know better, and who therefore bear a greater culpability for
this transgression than you, you did visit a section of Highbridge
off-limits to every Hellbender.
I just stared.
Mr Curriden will not start at third today, nor come in
at any time as a substitute. Mr Parris wont pitch today, either
as starter or reliever. Nor will Mr Mariani. Four players out,
owing to the reckless egotism of a man I trusted and the
sheeplike complicity of his stooges in crime. I begin to see how
a hateful guttersnipe with a Charlie Chaplin mustache could
seduce even the nation of Goethe.
I lowered my head and shifted my butt.
At four oclock, Phoebe will be across the street at Hitch
and Shirleens. Go see her. Find a way to excuse yourself and
make her feel a bit better, then return to watch your teammates
play one of the CVLs three best clubseven if they must do
it with sixteen men instead of twenty.
Mister JayMac handed me a lineup. He had Buck Hoey
at short, Junior Heggie at third for Curriden, and Lamar
Knowles at second for Junior. His starting pitchera bigger
surprise than his substitutions and position shiftswas Pete
Haystack Hay (His butt goes by bulk), who ordinarily came
in as a late-inning fireman because his lack of stamina after
eight or nine batters disqualified him as a starter. Sosebee and
Nutter would have to carry the load when Hay surrendered to
the hook; we had no other pitchers available because Ankers
was scheduled to pitch Sunday.
Uncle Jay said youd slither over, Phoebe
said when I went to see her. I figgered youd sooner answer a
altar call buck-naked, but, glory be, here you are.
Because of the pending game, Hitch & Shirleens Neighborly
Market had more than its usual share of customers.
Hitch had hightailed it somewheres, but Shirleen was showing
an old woman how to use her ration book, and a crew of burrheaded
kids hung over the edge of the drink cooler like maybe
it held a school of bait minnows. Phoebe and I wouldve had
more privacy in the grandstands across the street. Literally.
Well, Ichabod, s good to know you didnt jes skip
town, Phoebe said for the entire premises to hear. Sorry. I
say Ichabod? I meant Boles. I git em mixed up sometimes,
Boles n Ichabod, they sound so much alike. Before I could
react in any way to that, Phoebe spoke to the kids at the soft-drink
box: Yall git you a soda or drop that lid! Yore letting
the cool out, wasting juice!
The kids dropped the lidwham!and filed past me out
the door. One little boy gave my ball uniform a quick second
look, but the sight of it conjured no lasting magic for him.
I went to the glass countertop, my ear lobes as angry as
infected tonsils, to make peace with Phoebe. She, though, had
no hankering for easy terms.
Dont stand there. Im gonna have to ring something up.
Yore blocking my register. I took a step back. Lord, boy,
whyre you wearing them spikes? Think its okay to pock-mark
our noleum? The Neighborly Markets only linoleum ran between
the shelf aisles; the heavy-traffic area next to the register
and the drink cooler was unpainted concrete. Take em off,
Boles. Id never taken my ball shoes off in the market, and Id
visited it almost a dozen times since my first visit. Im not
kidding, Boles.
So I leaned into the counter and took off my spikes. This
dropped me a half inch or so, but it still didnt let Phoebe
stand nose to nose with me, more like nose to Adams apple.
On the other hand, emotionally Id stepped into a trench and
shed climbed onto an awards stand. The cold concrete bit
through my sanitaries.
Go to the milk locker. Phoebe nodded towards the rear
of the register aisle. Go on. I mean it. I padded down the
aisle to the milk locker. Open it. I did. Yore suppers on the
shelf next to the aiggs. Take it out and bring it up here. I saw
a white china plate covered with wax paper, tied like a Christmas
package with a cross of twine. I took the plate out of the
locker and returned to the front counter with it. Theys you a
stool right there, Phoebe said, nodding at a stool behind the
counter, down from the register. Set down there and eat. I
hate for you to have to miss yore supper. Go on. I aint kidding.
What I fixed for you last night, Boles, is too good to waste.
I squeezed into the behind-the-counter space and sat
down on the stool. Phoebe slapped a tin fork onto the countertop
and roughly rang up the groceries of a woman who eyed
me like Id just answered an altar call naked. I untied the string
holding the wax paper on the plate and found myself staring at
a cold fried-chicken breast, a scoop of cold, semifurry mashed
potatoes, and twenty or so green beans wearing sleeves of milky
grease.
Eat, Phoebe said. Eat.
I picked up the fork.
Oh, I suppose you want something to drink. Mrs Nagy,
would you git Boles here a strawberry soda. He dont really like
em much, but neither do I. Mrs Nagy fetched me a soda
from the cooler. Pop its cap off for him, please. Mrs Nagy
obliged, using her wet hand and sliding it across to me like a
bomb needing quick disposal. Phoebe sacked her purchases,
and Mrs Nagy skedaddled with a scowl.
Now eat, Phoebe said.
The chicken had meatiness and taste. I like cold chicken.
But the potatoes gagged me the way whipped clay wouldve,
and the green beans, under all their grease, had more strings
than a textile loom. I forced beans and potatoes down, string
by string and lump by lump. The soda helped.
Now tell me you liked it, Phoebe said.
I nodded that I had. In the case of the chicken, at least, I
didnt nod a lie. Phoebe took my fork and plate away from me
and stowed them on a shelf at my back.
Now say yore sorry, and mean it down to yore toe
bones.
I nodded my agreement to this too.
That jes dont git it. Phoebe put a stubby pencil and a
used envelope in front of me. Tell me right.
I wrote on the envelope back: Phoebe Im sorry. Really.
Tell me you wont pull that kind of jackass stunt again.
I scrawled, It wont happen againpromise promise promise! She
took the envelope and read the messagea couple of times, a
half dozen. Pretty soon she was staring through the words to
her own disappointment and humiliation of the night before.
A glazed-over sort of trance.
Okay, she said, snapping back. Pology accepted.
I breathed again, but the meal shed fixed for me rested in
my stomach like a bag of fractured bricks.
Gramma Shirleen, Phoebe called, cmup here n tell this
whangdoodle shortstop he aint Gods gift to Highbridge! Fore
his head grows so big it swallows his ears!
We lost Saturdays game against Opelika.
Buck Hoey didnt get a hit. Junior, at third, made two errors
throwing the ball all that unaccustomed way across the infield.
Pete Hay pitched six innings, but left trailing the Orphans five
to aught, with the visitors playing too heads-up for us to creep
back into it.
Criminy! Curriden shouted from the dugout when Junior made his
second error. Tkink! This aint the lousy sand-lots!
Wish youd thought before your little trip to Penticuff
Strip last night. Mister JayMac passed in front of Curriden,
who promptly shut up.
Opelikas at bat went on and on. When we finally got our
third out, Mister JayMac eased over and put a hand on my
knee. A fine thing for Colonel Elshtain and my sister to see
on one of their rare visits to Georgia. Another loss to Opelika
and a sorry-ass performance to boot. Tomorrow, Mr Boles,
youll start both games at short. Plan on leading us to an
uplifting Fourth of July victory. I wont have Tulipa telling
your mama that her son, owing to his bad judgment and selfishness,
spent Independence Day in a state of bench bondage.
Two uplifting victories, Darius said from his perch
down the bench. Caint let these fellas settle for jes one, sir.
Absolutely not. Mister JayMac seemed almost cheery,
like hed expected us to lose this one, like losing it would keep us
from losing on the Fourth. He clapped his hands in a boosterly
way as the Hellbenders dragged in for another go at the Orphan
pitcher, Lester Affleck.
Henry was hitless in three at-bats, with a strikeout and
two pop-ups to the second baseman. Leading off the inning, he
cracked another pop-up, this one foul. It splintered his bat and
drifted into the crowd for strike one. Henry gave the bat a flip,
caught it by the barrel, and banged its knob on home plate.
You could hear the hollow twang, like a chord on a bamboo
harp, all over the stadium. He tossed the broken bat to Euclid
and trudged over to us for a new one.
Because of my benching, Miss Tulipa still hadnt seen my
new Red Stix model do a lick of work in the CVL. I unracked
Mamas gift, via Coach Brandon and the Elshtains, and carried
it to Henry. He took it with a brain-dead look of distracted
raptness and gave it a swing.
Lord God, Turkey Sloan said, what you doing with
that bloody toothpick, Jumbo?
Henry turned his gaze on me. I could break it too. I
shrugged. At least the Elshtains wouldnt have to wait until
tomorrow to see their gift in action.
In the batters box again, Henry threatened Lester Affleck
with my Red Stix timber. The crowd, and every Orphan sub in
Opelikas dugout, scoffed, cracking wise or booing. Henry did
look like a country doctor with a tongue depressor dipped in
off-color gentian violet. That was okay. I still expected him to
silence the scoffers with a wrist-flick home run, just like in a
movie. He didnt, though. He struck out on the next two
pitches, badly missing a pair of changeups and almost losing
his footing both times.
Hey, Jumbo, nex time git you a telephone pole! a soldier
in the stands shouted.
Henry returned to the dugout and handed me my bat. It
may have bowed today, but it is still unbloodied. To you, then,
I leave its successful initiation tomorrow.
Thanks a lot, I thought.
In any case, Affleck finished with a shutout, only one of
three games all year in which we failed to score.
Yall come out tomorrow for a big Independence Day to-do
here at McKissic Field, PA announcer Milt Frye urged
what was left of our crowd. Two games for the price of one.
Barbecue on the grounds. At least one win or your money back.
If we take em both, free prizes for everyone leaving after the
second game. Weve also got a War Bond rally, some down-home
gospel singing, and a Big Surprise. Yall be here now!
Frye mightve gone on another three minutes, but somebody
tracked a needle on our scratchy 78 RPM of The Star-Spangled
Banner, and the blare of the anthem shut him up.
When I left that evening, a group of carpentersd come
back in to work on their mysterious system of ramps.
Along with most of my fellow
boarders, I ate a light supper in McKissic House, then retired
to the front porch to take the breeze. Mister JayMac and Miss
Giselle drove by in their Caddy with Colonel and Mrs
Elshtam, going to a dinner engagement somewhere out of
town. It sort of scalded me, but also sort of relieved me, they
hadnt asked me along.
Upstairs in my roomHenry had clean-up dutiesI
copied out some more of Henrys journal. These sections summarized
his journey away from Alaska and his ten-to-fifteen-year
ramble through the American Northwest. In Washington
State, Oregon, and Idaho, he pretty much weaned himself away
from meat eating to a diet of carrots, tubers, greens, berries,
and nuts. He hid from men, though, and haunted the woods.
Heres one passage:
Even in my estrangement from the friendlier aspects of humanity, in
the Cascades I often knew a melancholy joy. One afternoon, I experienced it
while seated on a boulder overlooking a creek picketed by trees and curtained
on either side by leaf mulch and moss. The plangent gurgling of the water and
the azure brilliance of the sky combined to inspirit meto such a degree that
I broke into one of the festival chants of the Oongpekmut.
I do not sing well. My voice has such a barbaric timbre that it may
discomfit even me. On this afternoon, however, my chant poured forth like a
nightingales warble. Although the birds themselves fell silent and insects ceased
to chirr, I adjuged it as melodious as the nightingaleswrongly, of course.
Two warriors stepped from the shrubbery beyond the streambed and
shot at me with bows. Although the banal repetitiveness of mans aggression
towards me had become highly predictable, this attack took me by surprise.
Would my authors race always greet my appearance with hostility and
violence? Europeans, Asians, Siberians, Anglo-Saxonseven Innuit
unfamiliar to meall reacted as if I posed a danger reauiring swift eradication.
My attackers, whose arrows flew wide or rebounded from my granite throne,
wore the dress of the Sahaptin group of North American Indians: Cayuse,
Pahuse, or Wallawalla. I identified them by their vestments and, when they
audibly conferred, by certain quirks of their Penutian-derived tongue.
As my shock quitted me, I struggled to my feet to expel a roar of
warning and reproach. The leather-clad indigenes withdrew behind a wall of
huckleberry bushes.
I roared again.
Fulminating thus, I leapt from my boulder into the verdant ground-cover
only a short dash from their conference place. This tactic, advance rather
than retreat, bemused and affrighted the warlike indigenes.
Sasquatch! one of them cried.
They fled, ripping through the foliage and calling out, as if to unseen
confederates, Sasquatch! Sasquatch!
Thereafter, apprised anew of my seemingly irrevocable pariahhood, I again
took care to avoid betraying my presence either to the natives of the region
or to the disregardant Anglo-Saxon invaders. I nonetheless continued to
reconnoiter the villages and towns of both groups. How often I heard the
alien shibboleth Sasquatch! on their lips, uniting these foes in
their fear and misapprehension of me. Thus, in my retreat from Oongpek and my
subsequent stay in the Pacific Northwest, I became a legend, which had its
origin and growth in a mortifying lie.
Henry came into our room a few minutes after Id read
this passage. He liked me copying his journal. Although hed
gone kayaking in front of the Elshtains, I seemed to be the
only soul in Highbridgeor anywherewho understood
exactly what that kayak meant in the tangled weave of his life. Or,
as he liked to call it, his second life.
To everyone else, Henry presented the kayak as a hobby, a
sportmans hobby, and they bought this explanation the way
they bought Henry himself, as a one-in-a-million fella with a
talent for ballplaying and a caboodle of crotchets. You ignored
these last, though, because, on the ball field, he produced.
Henry, alias Jumbo, towered over Muscles, but he didnt
scrape eight feet, as his creatord written in the account
published anonymously by Mrs Shelley in 1818 and released
thirteen years later with an introduction in which she claimed
authorship herself. I mean, a galoot eight feet tall would scare
anyone, especially, I thought, folks of a stature akin to, or even
smaller than, my own. With that thought in mind, I got out my
notebook and wrote:
Youre not as tall as Dr F. says he made you. Why not.
The surprise of the daya bigger surprise than having
Mister JayMac bench meoccurred just then. Henry began to
tug on the shoulder straps of the Extra Large overalls hed
worn to dinner, and his overalls collected in a starchy
blue-and-white puddle at his ankles.
Id never seen Henry drop trou before; neither, so far as I
knew, had anybody else on the Hellbenders. On road trips,
when he and I shared a room, he vanished into the lavatory to
change clothes or doused or draped off every glimmer of light.
In McKissic House, in temperatures thatdve floored a camel,
he slept in loose pajama bottoms and kept a sheet up to his
chin. The modesty of Hank Clerval wouldve gotten high
marks from a Baptist preachers missus.
Now, though, Henry stood there in baggy boxers, dingy
white skivvies, polka dots in a Dalmatian scatter from hip to
fly. He backed up, dragging his overalls, and sat on his bed
facing me. He stuck out his oakish legsgray, purple, yellow,
beige, so many colors they reminded me of a fleshy quilt. Pale
scars ran in puckered bands around his lower calves, a band to
each leg. Had Henry once worn anklets of barbed wire as a
scourge, the way monksd worn hair shirts or bankers and car
salesmen wear neck ties? I stared at Henrys legs. No wonder
he didnt shower with us, no wonder he sometimes hobbled
like a crip.
My pain receptors operate imperfectly, Daniel, he said.
Or, let me rather say, those triggering bodilyas opposed to
emotionalpain function unreliably. I decided to use this
truth about myself to my advantage. In a remote section of the
Ozarks, during Mr Clevelands second presidency, I thought
to make myself less fearsome. If my height affrighted people, I
would reduce it. If my fleshs grisly damask caused distaste or
consternation, I would seek a remedy for my complexion.
Henry leaned forward and gripped his ankles. He looked
like a giant being potty trainedGoliaths kid, maybe, or Paul
Bunyans.
Of all peoples, only the Oongpekmut had accepted me
as one of them. Winning their trust had taken more effort than
I ever wanted to expend again. I wanted permanent cures,
alterations in my bodily self that would ease my absorption
into any human community I hopefully approached.
Henry reached into the drift of his overalls, untied his
shoes, and heeled them off. Kicking away shoes and overalls
together, he sat there in his too-small cotton stockings.
With great quantities of gin, a kitchen knife, and a
hacksaw, I removed foot-long sections from the lower leg bones
my creator had scavenged from either a charnel house or an
abattoir. Among my fathers effects on the Caliban had been a
small notebook detailing many of the surgical procedures he
had employed to build, albeit not to animate, me. This miniature
treatise I had read and reread on my journey from the
Barents Sea to the Chukchi Peninsula, and then again at intervals
during my stay among my woman Kariaks Innuitto the
point of total familiarity and intuitive comprehension.
Armed with this information, I had little trouble cutting
and then reconnecting the appropriate bones. At the summer
solstice, with much trepidation I shortened my left leg. After
that autoexcision, I performed a similar medial amputation on
my right legHenry touched the white scarabout two
weeks later. By my creators design, I bleed enough to cleanse
my wounds, but not so profusely as to deprive me of recuperative
vigor. Thus, though at first unable to ramble abroad or to
limp from one spot to another in my cave, I healed in the time
I had privately alloted; that is to say, within three months, or
by the autumnal equinox.
This was an idyllic time for me, Daniel. In the early
phases of my recovery, I had access to a storehouse of nuts,
tubers, and dried fruits that I had laid by before abridging my
height. I lay on my back in the cave, near a long-abandoned
mill, and wrote poetry in my head or tried to solve self-posed
geometric or mathematical enigmas. I resisted the urge to sing.
Because I had foresightfully equipped my cave with rope ladders
and wooden travel rods, I could hand-over-hand from one
spot to another without putting any but a therapeutic stress on
my lower extremities. This same system took on added import
in the rehabilitation process, and it was not long before I again
mastered the rudiments of walking.
My self-surgery left me awkward afoot, but less alarmingly
a giant when I crashed about upright. During the latter
part of my healing, again ambulatory, I tested myself outdoors.
I gathered mockernuts; inhaled the aroma of hand-crushed
hickory leaves; and saw mergansers, crimson-headed canvas-backs,
and delicate wood ducks scull the September skies. Life
apart from man seemed an unutterable gift. Ahead, however,
lay autumns drear gales and the winters enfortressing cold, a
time that I bleakly awaited.
Indeed, I often thought of insinuating myself into a
human community as accepting as Kariaks people had been. I
trimmed my hair. I mixed many natural unguents, to repair the
twisted lumpiness and hideous variegation of my complexion. I
measured my progress in a shaving-mirror shard that I had
found. In it, I saw that my lotions and poultices had turned my
patchy skin an even pinkish gray. I could pass, I believed, for a
lame, ugly Caucasian. No fastidious American woman would
want me for a mate, but so long as I could chastely associate
with talented men and women of goodwill, I could endure this
lack of intimacy with a sympathetic female.
Over the years, Daniel, Ive endured, accommodating
myself to a strenuous celibacy. It has proved less difficult than I
feared. The years leach oneeven a creature doomed, as I am,
to a contingent immortalityof desire. A further mitigating
factor is my sterility. I neither gainsay nor scorn the allure of
erotic pleasure, but, for me, coitus sans any procreative potential
loses some of its relevance, and so also its allure, and
likewise its power to tempt. No longer do I blaze like a furnace.
I dont need women to fuel me. Thus, my capacities for a
higher passion channel into three sustaining reservoirs: atonement,
human companionship, and baseball.
Baseball I got. Companionship I had a glimmering of. But
atonement swept past like water in a spillway. Henry stood up.
His sutured calves drew my gaze as surely as a starlets gams
wouldve.
Ive revealed these signs of my self-mutilation, Daniel, to
impress upon you the length to which loneliness and a need to
belong once drove me. I do not regret having performed my
surgery, but I do regret the evidence of it. The scars dont pain
me in a physical sense, but the mere sight of them lays a bruise
on my heart. I entreat you then to look away.
Look away.
I looked away. Henry gathered up his overalls and
scooped himself back into them. I didnt see him do thisI
heard the rustle of denim and the muffled clicks of brass snaps.
On Sunday morning, when the Brown
Bomber pulled into the parking lot at McKissic Field, the
stadium and its barbecue pits had the look of a birthday bash
in a military zone. Lots of Highbridgers had paraded off to
church, but many hadnt. We Hellbenders, Mister JayMacs
public piety aside, fell into the second group. Wed substituted
a talk by Colonel Elshtain and some prayers on our bus ride
for attendance at an honest-to-God worship service. Anyway,
at the field, we saw folks standing in queue for the barbecue
(which wouldnt be served until one), vendors peddling all
kinds of gewgaws, and several soldiers in battle dress standing
guard along a cordoned lane through the lot to the place where
Darius always parked.
As soon as wed stopped, Mister JayMac spoke to us
from the front: President Roosevelt has spent the last two
days at the Little White House in Warm Springs. Given the
demands of the war, thiss been a hard time for him to get out
of Washingtonexcept for shipboard conferences with the
rulers of our allies or his battle commanders. For reasons I
dont think require an explanationMister JayMac wiped the
back of his neck with a handkerchiefthe President only
rarely visits Georgia at the height of summer. He came for one
day in August five years ago; usually, however, he confines his
expeditions down here to the spring or fall. His presence this
Fourth of July weekend bespeaks his strength as a man and his
integrity as a patriot. It honors every soul born or resident in
the South.
Holy cow! Trapdoor Evans blurted. That goddamn
polios not going to be at our games today, is he?
Colonel Elshtain stood. Hell be here for at least one of
your games and maybe both. Id suggest a more respectful form
of address than that goddamn polioshould you have occasion,
gentlemen, to meet him.
How about Your Highness? Buck Hoey said.
Criminy, Muscles said. We have to win. If we lose,
well shame ourselves in front of the President of the United
States.
Losing wont shame you, Colonel Elshtain said.
Cracks like that goddamn polio and How about Your
Highness? will far more effectively do that. Whether you
personally find the man now in office an ornament to or a blot
upon that position, it nonetheless remains that. . . .
And blahblah, blahblahblah.
A couple of seats up from me, Turkey Sloan raised his
hand.
What is it, Mr Sloan? Mister JayMac said.
Sloan stood up. Not too long ago, sir, I wrote a tribute
to the Leader of the Free World, his administration, and the
first family. To settle Colonel Elshtains doubts about Hellbender
loyalty, Id like your permission for me, Mr Hoey, Mr
Evans, and Mr Sosebee to recite it for him.
How longs this gonna take? Mister JayMac said.
Not even a minute, Sloan said. Sir, you know I always
write tight.
You do everything tight, Hoey said.
If youre going to do this, Mr Sloan, proceed, Mister
JayMac said. Its too hot to dawdle till Halloween in this
four-wheeled inferno.
Sloan made a humming sound, like a music teacher blowing
on a pitch pipe. His pals stood up, at smirky attention.
The Battle Hymn of the Repugnant by Nyland Sloan, as
performed by the author and his Disgusting Associates. In the
farce that followed, Sloan recited the first two lines of each
stanza of his tribute, while Hoey, Evans, and Sosebee joined
on every third-line chorus:
Tip your fez
To the Prez?
Shout, Glory Hallelujah!
Whose New Dealll
Make you squeal?
Why, Frankie Rooz-ah-velt-ahs!
Cordell Hull
Is a cull
Wholl downright coldly screw yah!
Eleanor
We deplore.
Hey, huddy, whats it to yah?
We regret
Eliot,
Their sorry naval joon-yah!
Lets debar
FDR!
Make flea-bit Fala Pooh-Bah!
Taking the whistles and applause, Sloan and his Disgusting
Associates bowed to this side and that. (Fala was Roosevelts
Scotty dog and traveling buddy, a regular Fido Firstus.)
Henry and I stamped and clapped along with the others. The
colonel sank into his seat like a punctured bounce-back toy,
rigidly facing front.
Mister JayMac shook his head and shooed us off the bus.
Beat it, yall! Quicklime!
We filed down the aisle stamping our feet. As we jostled along, every player
but me chanted Shout, Glory Hallelujah! or
Make flea-bit Fala Pooh-Bah!
Mariani pitched the first game, and I
started at short. Pregame ceremonies included a War Bonds
spiel by a wounded vet, Mister JayMacs welcome, and the
colored accordionist Graham Jackson playing The Star-Spangled
Banner as a black choir, dressed in phony plantation garb,
sang the lyrics.
The President and his party hadnt arrived yet; and few
folks in the stands understood we expected such a distinguished
visitor and sports fan, one of the men whod kept pro
baseball from shutting down for the war. Still, Mister JayMac
refused to delay the doubleheaders start.
Bottom of the first, I poked one down the right-field line
with my new Red Stix bat. It felt good, that double, almost like
it wiped from my past everything thatd happened on Friday
night: my gin binge, the trip to The Wing & Thigh, my no-show
at Phoebes house, and Henrys cavalry-to-the-rescue routine.
Charlie Snow drove me home with a single up the middle.
In our first at bat, in fact, we sent another six men to the plate
and scored two more runs.
Between innings, I heard sirens screaming just outside the
stadium. They came closer and closer, eking up higher in pitch
and volume until yard dogs began to howl and many people in
the stands covered their ears.
Ladies and gentlemen, Frye announced over the PA
system, its the one hundred and sixty-seventh anniversary of
this great nation, but the first time ever that the President of
the United States has attended a baseball game in Highbridge
or any other CVL city. All rise! As if FDR was a judge and
McKissic Field a courtroom.
Id already made my way to my shortstop position. When
our old military-band recording of the national anthem began
to play, I didnt have to rise. The fans, though, buckled upward
en masse, craning their necks trying to catch sight of the most
famous manforget John D. Rockefeller or Clark Gablein
the whole United States. The sirens outside the stadium
stopped about the time the anthems rockets began to glare red
and its bombs to burst in air.
Then, because the President hadnt made his entrance by
songs end, Frye played it again. And a third time, with folks
forgetting proper hand-over-heart protocol, before a guard of
uniformed Marines and helmeted soldiers marched in over the
brand-new ramp system. Behind them, some wheelchair outriders
in suits appeared at the top of a plywood slope. They
ushered in the waving President, a man until then bashful of
exposing himself in such an unmanly state. On that Fourth,
though, he rode, head high, to the caged box seat behind our
dugout. Once the military guardd peeled off, in fact, I could
see the Prez as well as, or better than, anybody else in the park.
I couldnt believe it. Me, a kid from nowhere, standing
maybe fifty yards from the only three-term chief executive in
the history of our land. My nape hairs did the Wave decades
before that cheer even got invented.
Know what kept rippling through my gray matter, though? He didnt see
my first hit. What if I dont get another?
Except for the smudges under his eyes and the dents in
his cheeks, Mr Roosevelt looked spiffy, a lot like Francis X.
Bushman or some other silent-screen actor. Cool white linen
suit, dapper straw snapbrim, fluffy polka-dot bow tie.
Someoned rigged a microphone at chest heightfor a
fella in a wheelchair, that isand the Presidents primary
pushera Secret Service agent?slipped him up to it.
Ball-players and fans aliked started cheering. The cheering swelled
until it swamped the home of the brave finale of The
Star-Spangled Banner. The Prez met the hullabaloo with head
nods, his arms in the air like those of some raptured Holy
Roller, his smile as wide as Tennessee.
The Presidents private box filled up: military guards
and Secret Service men, a bigwig or two from FDRs staff, and,
to my hefty surprise, Colonel and Mrs Elshtain, Miss Giselle,
and LaRaina and Phoebe Pharram. In his shirt sleeves, Mister
JayMac himself climbed up on our dugouts tarpapered roof
and walked over to the Chief to shake his hand and welcome
him to Highbridge.
Amid this tumult, Colonel Elshtain stood in the box
rocking up and back on his toes and smirking like a Siamese
with a goldfish tail showing between its lips. No wonder The
Battle Hymn of the Repugnant hadnt amused him.
The cheering didnt die. Coloreds and whites alike
cheered FDR, the coloreds from the bleachers seats or in their
spots as groundskeepers, custodians, and snack vendors. A few
peoplemostly womencried. The ward turned FDR into a
god for many folks, even conservative whites. The blacks liked
him because his missus spoke out for fairness and entertained
Negro leaders in the White House.
The President quieted us with some calm-down hand
gestures and an attempt to use the mike: Ladies and gentlemen,
if you please . . . That wide chin-up smile again. By
gosh, this is a splendid reception, and Im delighted to be here.
Indeed, my apologies for interrupting your game, coming in
like the Caliph of Baghdad. Goodness knows, today we celebrate
American independence, not the bondage of our national
pastime to my holiday travel schedule.
He talked on like that for a minute and then gave up the
mike to Mister JayMac, who summoned Graham Jackson and
the plantation singersfavorites of FDRs from his stays at
Cason Callaways Blue Springsback to perform The Star-Spangled
Banner again. That made five times wed heard it in
forty minutes, but our fans shouted Play ball! afterwards as
loudly as they had every other time.
Mr Roosevelt bumped up to the mike again: Later today,
ask your neighbors if they heard about the accident here at
McKissic Field. When they say, Im afraid I havent, tell em,
An Opelika player leaned on his bat so long waiting for the
game to resume that termites ate the handle out and he fell and
broke his back. The President threw back his head and
guffawed, then leaned again into the mike: I love it! Dont you
just love it! They surely did. We all did. Even the Orphans
broke up, slapping one another on the back and catcalling Max
Delaney, the hitter in the on-deck circle.
If Delaney had an ounce of sense, hed fall down and
grab his back, Curriden told me. But the palooka aint got
roach shit for brains.
The Orphan manager, Lou Ed Dew, tried to convince
Happy Polidori, the plate umpire, to scrap the first inning and
start us over again. He seemed to think the CVL rule book
forbid the playing of anything but a full nine-inning game after
The Star-Spangled Banner. I edged closer to the Orphan
dugout to pick up the details of this bizarre squabble.
I dont recollect that rule, Lou Ed, Polidori said.
Its in there, Lou Ed Dew said. Im pritty shore. Id
bet money. I think I would.
Would you be as certain if the Orphansd scored three
runs in the first instead of the other way round?
Shore. Shore I would.
Thatd be about the foolishest rule ever devised by man
then, Polidori said. A team could hire a band to play the
Banner ever time its boys had a bad inning out to field and
guv up a run or six. I mean, musicians for the Boll Weevils or
the Linenmakersd get rich.
Check the book, Polidori. Check the book!
I dont have to. Polidori lowered his mask and walked away
from Lou Ed Dew. Play ball! I mean, Resume play!
Dunnagin took a fresh ball from Polidori and trotted
with it over to Mr Roosevelts box. Sir, would you be willing
to throw out thehe pretended to count in his headthe
sixth or seventh ball of this game?
Would I? FDR said. By gosh, Mr Dunnagin, Id regard
it as churlisha missed opportunityto refuse.
Dunnagin flipped the ball to Mister JayMac and backed
up about twenty paces. Mister JayMac handed the President
the horsehide, and FDR rubbed it up like a New Englander
shaping a snowball. He winked over one shoulder at Miss
Giselle, then tossed the ball to Dunnagin, who reacted like Mr
Rooseveltd set his palm on fire. Then he thrust the ball up in
the air. Our fans cheered their noggins off again. The organist
cranked up a rowdy versiona really rowdy versionof
Therell Be a Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight.
Thow it to your pitcher, Polidori told Dunnagin.
This babys going home with me, Dunnagin said. One
day a kid of mine might like to have it.
The leaguell have to fine you for misappropriating CVL
property, Polidori said. The leaguell
Screw the league, Dunnagin said. Toss Mariani a fresh
ball, Mr Ump.
The game did resume. We Hellbenders played inspiredly,
in the field and up to bat. I had two more hits in our opener,
neither for extra bases, and fielded like FDRs predecessor in
office, a Hoover: thwup, thwup, thwup! I just sucked em up and
howitzered em over to Henry.
It wasnt close, but the President enjoyed himself. He
knew Mister JayMac and Miss Giselle, he knew the Elshtains,
he had field-level box seats behind the dugout. He had a Co-Cola,
a bag of peanuts, and another Co-Cola. I wouldnt swear
to it, but he mayve doctored that second Coke with a tot of
something spiritous. A regular fella, for a Harvard man and a
three-term president. It was pretty much a wonderwork I
played as decent as I did, I spent so much time eyeing him
sidelong and watching in literal dumfoundment how sprightly
and pretty Miss Gisellewith her belief in, and hatred of, the
so-called Eleanor Clubslooked bantering with him.
In the bottom of the eighth, Henry, with only one hit to
that point, polewhacked a curve off the fourth Orphan pitcher:
a flabbergasting blast that cleared the outfield wall, the bleacher
seats behind the wall, the parking lot outside, maybe even the
Panhandle-Seminole Railway tracks slashing southeast to
Camp Penticuff. People stood up to watch the ball soar. In the
brief silence that fell over nearly every onlooker there, FDRs
high-tone tenor sounded in his open mike and vibrated in
every speaker on the field:
Swear to God, Clyde, thats the most monsterish home
run Ive ever seen! Who is that fella?
Jumbo! the crowd answered. Jumbo! Jumbo! Jumbo!
Henry trotted the bases, running on stems hed hack-sawed
a foot shorter during the second presidency of Cleveland,
listing in his trot like a man on a unicycle.
Well, Jumbo my chum, congratulations, said the President,
this time deliberately using the mike. I havent seen a
shot carry that far since the U.S.S. Enterprise showed off her
guns for me.
Laughter. Applause. Henry crossed the plate, circled back
to our dugout, and tipped his cap to Mr Roosevelt.
At some point during the twin bills intermission, FDR
and his friends pulled out and rumbled over our highway of
ramps to the parking lot. People saw him leaving, of course,
but the Fourth of July hoopla on the fieldan Army glee club,
a quilt rafflemore or less covered his exit.
I didnt realize he couldnt walk, Sudikoff said between
the two games.
He can, Nutter said. With braces. But nobody wants
to clack as far as hedve had to in a set of leg braces.
I jes never realized, Sudikoff said.
You werent supposed to, Nutter told him.
We took the second game too, although this one evolved
into a pitching duel between Fadeaway Ankers and a clever
ex-major leaguer known as Smiley Clough. The game ended three
to one. Lou Ed Dew probably wished Mr Roosevelt had
watched it instead of our scalp-em-bald romp in the opener.
Aboard the Brown Bomber, riding back to McKissic
House, I kept hearing FDR say, Swear to God, Clyde, thats the
most monsterish home run Ive ever seen! You could tell from that
remark how hed become president; he just had an instinct
about him.
Angus Road and the McKissic House
estate had guardsCamp Penticuff MPs and specially
assigned soldiers in battle dressposted all around them.
Darius drove us past this armed picket line and up the
curving drive to the boardinghouse, then along the grassy track
between the boardinghouse and the wood-shingled carriage
house, then past that garage straight down the clovery slope
towards Hellbender Pond. Every player on the team was aboard
the bus, not just McKissic House tenants.
The ponds grassy bank boasted three open-sided tents
with striped roofs and several trestle-legged picnic tables set
out under them. A bank of big electric fans, powered by a noisy
gas-powered generator, flanked the tents to keep us picnickers
cool and mosquito-free. FDR and his party had already
claimed one of these tents, and Marines or a Secret Service
detail had furnished it with dining-room chairs and the back
seat of the Presidents touring car, which theyd removed and
set in front of a table draped with a linen cloth and laid with
china and crystalware.
Kizzy and a rail-thin part-time butler had put out barbecue and
Brunswick stew from the pits at the ball fieldalso cole slaw,
pickles, olives, deviled eggs, and suchlike fixingsbut
not on FDRs table. He had a basket packed with fried
chicken, California wine, and French bread. He didnt like the
vinegary tang of Suthren-style barbecue.
Darius parked not far from the tents, but kept his hand
on the door lever, holding us in. Yall knew Mister JayMac had
a to-do planned out here. He jes didnt know if the President
tended to stay fo it. Looks like he has. Last thing Mister
JayMac told me, if Mister Franklin stayed, was to ast yall to
behave yosefs and do ol Highbridge proud.
Fadeaway Ankers said, What would do old Highbridge
proud is not have a uppity woolhead telling grown white men
what to do. Jesus.
Wham. Everybody on the Bomber went tight-jawed. Dariusd
spoken by way of the rearview, about as boy-humble as
he had it in him to be. Now he cut his eyes to one side, and all
the rest of us Hellbenders could see of him in the mirror was
the top of his head.
As good as you throw, Charlie Snow told Fadeaway,
you still aint made it to grown yet. And Darius wasnt telling
nobody nothing, he was passing a message.
You expected Charlie Snow to field his center-field spot
like a two-legged whitetail and to clutch-hit the team out of
jams, but you didnt expect him to open his mouth a passel,
and ordinarily he obliged your expectations.
I jes chunked a three-hitter at Opelika, Fadeaway said.
How much more grown can a fella git?
Arms mature, Snow said. Heads a baby.
Muscles got up. And the rest of usre tired of listening to
this hoo-hah. Lets party with the President. Just mind your ps
and qs, dammit!
Darius levered the door open, and we began filing off the
bus.
Off the Bomber, we edged towards the tents. Nobody
had the nerve or the bumpkin grace to angle towards FDRs
roadster sofa and Park Avenue table setting, though. At the
same time, no one could resist glancing over that way and
trying to imagine what the President of the United States had
to discuss with the McKissics, the Elshtains, or Miss LaRaina
and Phoebe. Once or twice, the Great Man smiled and nodded
or wagged his cigarette holder in a folksy greeting.
As Fadeaway sauntered around the Bombers nose with
Evans and Sosebee, Darius put a hand on his shoulder. When
he saw whod touched him, Fadeaways nose wrinkled, and he
triggered himself for curses, maybe even fisticuffs.
Tell me what you think woolhead means. Dariuss voice
wasnt much below its normal volume, but the generator and
the box fans kept the other picnickers from hearing.
Lemme tell you what uppity means, Fadeaway said.
You could learn two new words jes by looking in a mirror.
I know more words than you got memories, Darius
said. What woolhead means, Mister Ankers, is you aint got the
belly to speak out nigger, or the class to call my name.
Quickly and quietly, Sosebee grabbed Fadeaways arms
from behind. Easy, kid. Remember who-alls here.
Remember this instead, Darius said. If it got figgered
on sense and soundness stead of what it is, youd come up the
biggest nigger in town. Watch I dont whup yo red ass black.
He stood glaring at Fadeaway when most folks, delivered of
such a squelch, wouldve swaggered away.
Henry leaned over his shoulder. Enough, Mr Satterfield.
This is no time for a physical collision.
Sho, Darius said. Clision time jes never quite comes
round, do it? He pocketed his hands, backed away from the
players stalled in front of the Bomber, and hiked up the slope
to his apartment.
Hey! Kizzy called from one of the tents. You, Darius,
dont you want no victuals?
He just kept walking.
Uppity nigger, Fadeaway said under his breath.
Henry and I and the other Hellbenders
ate. The family men had their families there, and more than a
fewBuck Hoey and his boys, Charlie Snow and his childless
wife, Turkey Sloan and his freckle-faced teenage daughterventured
out on the pond in johnboats to fish.
At Mister JayMacs prompting, Henry removed his kayak
from the sawhorses near the buggy house, fetched it down to
the pond under one arm, and demonstrated for the President
how a man his sizethe swatter of a monsterish home
runcould paddle to and fro among the anglers boats with
hardly a telltale ripple and not even one fish-disturbing splash.
By this time, Mister JayMacd coaxed me into the heart of
FDRs picnic circle, with the Elshtains, the Pharram females,
and a few fussy suit types from D.C. All eyes followed Henrys
silken progress over the ponds cocoa scum.
Astonishing so large a man can move with that agility,
FDR said. Howd he come by the kayak?
He says he built it, Mister JayMac said. And Ive no
cause to doubt him. Look how he handles it.
Indeed, if I could handle Congress half so well, Id sleep
more and haggle less with the likes of Senator George. God
knows, I envy Mr Clervals finesse with the big stick, whether a
ball bat or a kayak paddle.
Mr Roosevelt had plenty of finesse with words. I milled
about close enough to his car-seat divan to catch a lot of what
he said, but the Elshtains and Miss LaRaina monopolized the
time he didnt give to the McKissics.
I marveled at Miss Giselle. With a glint in her eye, she
watched Henry kayak and chatted with the President. How
could she lap Mr Roosevelt in such honey-tongued politeness
when his wifes Christian name gagged her like ammonia ice?
Its my view Mussolinis doomed, Colonel Elshtain
broke into their stateside chitchat. Even he must know it. The
air strike on Rome last month had tove told him so.
Il Duces an evil man, Miss Giselle said, but must we
destroy the Holy See to uproot him? Is it necessary, sir, to
bomb to rubble both the Vatican and the monuments of Rome
to unseat this petty despot?
Not at all, FDR said. Nor shall we do so. Ive urged
the Vatican to try to get him to declare Rome an open cityto
remove all military bases and personnel in and about Rome to
the countryside, and to desist from using the citys railroad
facilities as reprovisioning conduits for either Hitlers boys or
the Italian infantry. If Benito listens to reason, Rome survives
unscathed. If not, well, to my mind theres not one Roman
statue or one relic in the Vatican worth the blood of a single
American soldier.
Phoebe pulled me away from the presidential divan. We
stalked along the pond, under the long banana-green fingers of
a weeping willow, and through a hand-grenade scatter of cones
from a magnolia tree farther up the bank. A quartet of
HellbendersSosebee, Dunnagin, Hay, and Parriscrooned The
Music Goes Round and Round, If I Didnt Care, and
Making Whoopee, among other corny numbers, a capella.
The clang of horseshoes in a pair of facing pits near the buggy
house echoed like anchors bumping a ships hull.
Bravo! the President cried after one of the quartets
songs. Splendid, gentlemen!
I guess hes all right, Phoebe said, nodding downslope
at the Presidents tent. For a New York swank.
He seemed all right to me. I didnt know you could, or
even should, try to find fault with the President. Which was
why Sloans snotty poem aboard the Bomber had made such an
impression on me. To me, FDR was like a king. For the biggest
part of my life, no one else had held his office.
I know where you went the other night when you didnt
show up for dinner, Phoebe said. Penticuff Strip.
I looked at my shoes. Her great-uncle knew where Id
spent Friday evening. So did most of my teammates. At a
picnic, you just naturally overheard allegations, brags, gossip.
Actually, it uz worse than that, Phoebe said. The
Wing and Thigh, a chicken place n chippy house.
The quartet crooning for FDR had just eased in to
Making Whoopee, a wink-and-slink version with lots of eye
rolling and so on. I turned red from Phoebes remark and from
the risqué gist of the song. Whatd Phoebe know about a
chippy house, for Gods sake? For that matter, what did I?
You lose your cherry?
I looked at her like shed asked me if Id been conceived
and delivered a bastard.
I ast, Did some low woman on the Strip git yore
cherry?
The urge hit me to walk away. But a sudden and ripening
hunch that walking away would cut me off from Phoebe forever
reversed it. I had to answer her, and answer straight, so I
shook my head, thankful my dummyhood spared me the messand
also the tail-tuckingof going into detail.
You swear?
I nodded. Curridens moneyd bought me nothing but a
knot on the head and a broken chain of shameful memories.
If thats true, Daniel Boles, you better kiss me.
Itd been true my whole acne-plagued adolescence, but no
young femaled ever hinted that my intact cherry entitled me to
a Public Display of Affection. Well, semipublic: the branches
of that magnolia half-hid us from the merrymakers by the
pond.
Phoebe put her hands on my skinny flanks and reached
up on her toes to give me a kiss. I bent to get it. It tasted a
little like barbecue sauce and Nehi creme soda, but more like
the kitten breath and the dreamful hunger of a fifteen-year-old
girl with more heart than slickness. I liked that kiss. It fed, or
seemed to feed, almost all of Phoebe into me, the fizzy soda of
her hunger, her mouth, her eyes, her breast buds, her armpits,
even the commonplace mystery of her sex. I grabbed her and
drove the kiss onharder, more acrid-sweet, ever more
puzzlesome to us both.
Tiptoe to keep it going, Phoebe snapped off a blue-darter
of a fart. The kickback shoved her teeth into mine with a
lightninglike click. The kiss ended then, but Id lived years
since it began, and that little poot, instead of rendering our
kiss vile or comical, opened the moment out for me in a funny
way. It was like Phoebed handed me her diary or walked into
my bedroom without a stitch of clothing. I felt singled out,
honored, and it befuddled meexpelled me back into the
numbing hurly-burly of my Hellbender teammateswhen she
broke free and hugged herself.
What you gonna do? That goopy Brunswick stew. I eat
two spoonfuls and that happens.
I moved to comfort hernot that she needed comforting,
more like distractingand to thieve another kiss. But
Mister JayMac, or somebody else with a gale-force pucker,
whistled, and Phoebe dragged me by the hand out from under
the magnolias brittle awning into the spread-out bruise of a
Fourth of July sunset.
Yall get down here! Mister JayMac called. Pronto!
The Presidents flunkies, and some ballplayers, had
packed his touring car, reinstalling the back seat so he and his
party could return to Warm Springs for the night. Next day,
hed fly to Washington to jump back into harness as commander-in-chief;
then, the coming Friday, while the Hellbenders
played the first of a four-game set against the Linenmakers,
U.S. and British paratroopers would jump into Sicily to lay the
groundwork for an Allied invasion of Italy.
Side by sidebut not hand in handPhoebe and I ambled
downslope to the Presidents open-topped car. Motorcycles
straddled by MPs already flanked it, and soldiers in
helmets and battle fatiguesright out of a March of Time
newsreelheld sentinel posts all along a snaky line from the
pond to McKissic House to Angus Road. The Elshtains, Miss
LaRaina, and the McKissics stood beside the car speaking their
good-byes.
Below one of the tents, near the water, a fistfight broke
out. Ballplayers and MPs rushed toward the mayhem. Grown
men shouted like hooligans. Kids on the grounds hurried to
find a sane adult to shield them from whateverd begun to
happen. The two men fighting locked each other around the
neck and bent at the waist like recruits doing a peculiar type of
calisthenics. They grappled, they fell down, they thrashed like
freshly dug earthworms.
Bust his lip for him, Muscles!
Come on, Reese!
Hit him! Hit him! Hit him!
The grapplersMusselwhite and Curridengot to their
feet again, staggered to the ponds verge, toppled, rolled into
the water, came back up streaming and sputtering and wrestling,
a pair of our best playersfellas right up there with
Snow and Clervalacting like infantile yahoos. The splashing
and cursing continued so long and loud it even began to
embarrass the Presidents security people, whod positioned
themselves around his touring car like bank guards around a Wells
Fargo wagon. At last, four MPs slogged into the water to put
an end to the fracas. One of them, for his trouble, caught a
knee in the groin, and the rest went into a domino drop that
prompted even some of their buddies to hoohah.
Hey! Turkey Sloan shouted. Youre scaring the fish!
Henry appeared in the hullabaloo near the water. Chinese
lanterns strung among the tents flickered in a breeze-blown
dance behind him. He elbowed his way to the ponds edge,
waded in like Gulliver, and collared Muscles and Curriden
without getting pulled to his knees himself. He dragged the
lummoxes to shore, one to a hand, like a fisher bringing in a
pair of salmon-freighted nets. He kept coming in with them
until, side by side on their hands and knees, they gasped on the
grass just below the farthest tent.
There are combats enough about this planet, Henry
said. Doesnt the significance of this occasiongesturing
toward FDRinspire you to at least a mean civility? I am
shamed for every Hellbender here.
Curriden and Muscles gasped and sputtered.
Beside FDRs car, Mister JayMac said, Sir, he speaks for
me too. I hope youll forgive
Forget it, Jay, Mr Roosevelt said. Boys will be boys.
High spirits and high stakes are a volatile mix, eh? Were all
susceptible to a bout of intemperance these days.
Theyre out of Wednesdays game against Cottonton,
Mister JayMac said.
Not on my account, I hope. Im inclined to believe their
infra-dig donnybrook reflects a long and vexing day. Go easy.
Roll out the velvet.
Theyre suspended. You wouldnt hang a medal around
an erring battle captains neck either, sir.
Hear, hear, Colonel Elshtain said.
FDR laughed. Surprisingly, he caught sight of Phoebe
and me. Ah, Miss Pharram, Mr Boles, fine evening for a
stroll. I bid you a pleasant farewell.
Colonel Elshtain said, Mr President, if you would. He
and Miss Tulipa traded a look, and FDR regarded me like I
was a kid hospitalized with tuberculosis. My stomach did a
sudden trout flop. My fingers chilled blue.
You played sharp as a blade today, Daniel, Mr Roosevelt
told me. Youve a splendid future ahead of you.
I offered a strangled croak, trying not to look like a
dumb orangutan.
Its all right. Your friends have told me of your handicap.
Please regard it as a species of bond between us, different
as our individual problems may appear. FDR nodded at the
colonel. Very well. Let him in. Im not going to do this in
front of an admiring bog.
Let who in? Do what in front of whom?
Colonel Elshtain opened the cars rear door and nodded
me in. The President has something to tell you, Daniel. Ride
down to the front gate with him.
Me? I hung there doubt-riddled and confused.
Go on, Phoebe said. He wont bite.
FDR thought that hilarious. What big teeth I have, hes
thinking. What a set of choppers. Well, Miss Pharrams rightI
hardly ever bite a potential Democratic voter. He sobered
pretty quick. Hop in, Daniel.
With everyone lookingeven Muscles and Curriden,
both like unrecognizable bog monstersI climbed in next to
FDR, behind a black chauffeur and a Secret Service agent
dressed to the Beau Brummel nines. The President gave me a
nod, and we drove up the slope past Dariuss apartment and
McKissic House and down one leg of the circular drive to
Angus Road. Fireflies winked as we purred through the summer
evening.
Colonel Elshtain asked me to break this news to you as
a favor for past services skillfully rendered, the President said.
He seemed to think its coming from me might soften it. I
doubt that. All I can do is leaven the inevitable pain with an
expression of our nations sincerest gratitude.
Inevitable pain? What the hell?
The President fished a piece of papera telegram?from
an inside pocket of his linen coat. My goodness, thats
clumsy. Forgive me. He opened the paper out and studied it
for a moment. Daniel, your father died in the Aleutian Islands,
on the sixteenth of June, not too long after the Fourth
Infantry had retaken Attu from the Japanese. Hed flown to
Attu with some Eleventh Air Force personnel from Umnak;
they arrived in the wake of mopping-up exercises, and on an
expedition of some sort to the interior, your father, Richard
Oconostota Boles, and four other brave Americans died. The
President handed me the telegram. That presents the unadorned
facts, Daniel. The details I have from Colonel
Elshtain, who himself has them from an officer in Graves
Registration with the Alaska Command. In any event, your
father died an honorable death in the service of his country.
I held the telegram. Wed reached the front gate. The
limousine, with its escort vehicles and outriders, stopped and
idled. A mockingbird meowed from a pine across the road. I
saw myself receiving this sorry news like somebody watching a
film might follow an overhead shot of a motorcade and eavesdrop
on the mutterings of a make-believe president. But FDR
sat close enough to touch, and the crumbs from a loaf of
French bread had funneled together in a fold of the removable
seats dove-gray upholstery.
I hear your parents lived apart these past few years,
FDR said. On the other hand, a childs affection for a parent
seldom dies utterly after an estrangement, and I imagineindeed,
I hopeyou still recall your father with a measure of
fondness. Im deeply honored, and likewise deeply sorry, to be
the messenger of your pain.
I couldnt cry. You dont sobnot, at least, if youre a
seventeen-year-old pro ballplayerin the presence of Franklin
Delano Roosevelt. The gist of what hed said didnt corkscrew
immediately into me anyway, and memories of my dad
crowded fast and thick. I gave the Prez a nod, opened my door,
and got out.
A lift back up to the house? he said.
Uh-uh. My surroundings had gone all blurry and foreign,
I couldve been standing on a twilit African mud flat.
A privilege tove made your acquaintance, Daniel.
I mayve raised my head, or not. I turned and trudged
back up the lawn towards McKissic House. FDR and his crew
processed off the grounds, into the honeysuckle drench of the
evening.
Phoebe met me halfway, on a dead run. I handed her the
telegram. She didnt read it. Someoned already told her what it
said. She lifted her hands. She walked in a half circle. She threw
herself at me, like I was a tackling dummy, and clung to me in
a glut of rainy griefs. I hugged her back.
Phoebe, I said.
More than a month had passed between
my buggery by Pumphrey and word of Dick Boless death. Call
that month a fugue of dummyhood. No one in Highbridge,
except Mister JayMac, had known me as anything other than a
mute. So it sometimes seemed to me, and probably to others,
my affliction had existed from childhood and would go into
the grave with meto everlasting muteness. Ha.
On the other hand, just getting Phoebes name out didnt
open the door for a whole stifled dictionary of yawps. My old
friend the stammer rode half the words I did say, maybe more.
Besides, Id cast off the habit of talking. Silence seemed easier
sometimes, nobler others, and sometimes just happily worrisome
for the persnickety folks who wanted either answers or
explanations out of me. If my tongue didnt hurry to comply
with the speech signals from Language Central, well, I didnt
sweat it. People talk too much anyhow. I prove that with my
throat mike and these damned interviews.
Danny can talk, Phoebe announced, leading me back to
the others. He said my name.
Miss Tulipa embraced me. Then Miss LaRaina hugged
me. Kizzy appearedshe rocked me to and fro with her forehead
hard on my breastbone. Even Miss Giselle clocked in with
a flurry of shoulder pats. Mister JayMac, the colonel, and the
Hellbenders haunted the edges of my loss like clueless border
guards.
Such a trauma, Miss Tulipa said. Such a trauma to
overcome your laryngitis.
You gots to be strong, Kizzy said, her braids like spun-metal
snakes in my hands. Mr Roozerfeld never told you that
sadness to have you go lint-simple, Danny Bowes.
I pushed Kizzy far enough back to gaze into her face. I
d-d-dont c-care. Im gl-glad my d-d-daddys dead.
A kid of the new school, Hoey said from nearby. A
real lover of the fifth commandment.
I found Hoeys silhouette among all the others and glared
at him. Sc-scr-screw you. Nobody whooped or laughed. In
those days, you didnt talk dirty in the presence of ladies, even
if one was a woman of color and another had at best only a
slippery claim on the title. So my retort to Hoey shocked the
fellas as much as it did the gathered womenfolk, my champions
and my comforters. Maybe only Phoebe appreciated the hasseled
defiance of it, and maybe she shouldnt have. Everyone
made allowances, thoughnot counting Hoey, I guessand I
got back to my room without being tarred and feathered.
Upstairs, Henry let me be. Huddled on my bed with our
basket fan chasing fever chills down my arms and legs, I told
myself even doing his duty to God and country hadnt saved
my father from hellfire. Anyone could reckon why. He deserved
it, frying forever. Hed hurt Mama bad and just about destroyed
me, skipping out. He deserved a million-year broil in
Beelzebubs furnace.
Then I remembered Tenkillers abandoned icehouse, and
Sparrow Alley, and the Boles & Son Jes-for-Fun Oklahoma
World See-ries, and the sump of my bitterness started to evaporate.
Did Satan grant pardons? Reprieves? Weekend furloughs?
The Hellbenders record on July 5, 1943,
was twenty-two wins, seventeen losses; wed played one game
past the seasons official midpoint. Wed split our last six
games with Opelika, who still had a game or two on us, the
result of a fast getaway in May. And the Gendarmes, whod
beaten us two out of three in an away series at the end of June,
still led the league.
In a meeting on Tuesday afternoon, Mister JayMac assessed
the situation and told us what to do to ready ourselves
for a successful stretch run: Tomorrow morning, gentlemen,
we go on the road to play the Boll Weevils and the
Linenmakers. The next week they come here. These fellas play
baseball like the Flying Tigers dance Swan Lake. If they beat us,
well deserve our enmirement in third or fourth place. Yesterday
we whipped Lou Ed Dews hotshot Orphans twice. Congratulations.
Thank God you didnt disappoint Mr Roosevelt,
gentlemen.
Thank God we didnt disappoint you, Buck Hoey said.
Amen! amend a chorus of Hellbenders.
But this is no time to suppose that jes because weve got
our percherons harnessed and our wagon on track, were going
to roll over everybody else like they were dust chickens. Uh-uh.
So I am deeply perturbed that Mr Curriden and Mr Musselwhite,
team heroes, elected by their off-the-field performance
last night to sit out Wednesdays contest against the Boll Weevils.
Their absence from the lineupnor do I mean to disparage
or demoralize their replacementscould well cost us that
game and deny us the psychological momentum to make the
entire road trip a success. The rest of yallll jes have to gird up
your loins in resolute and selfless compensation.
Why dont you jes let em play? Norm Sudikoff said.
It was only a kind of tiff.
A tiff! Howso a tiff, Mr Sudikoff?
I mean, it looked like a all-out war, but only because
theyre such bruisers to begin with. A ant boxin another ant
dont quake the ground like a couple of rhinos would. So, you
know, jes let em play on Wednesday.
Mister JayMac stared at Sudikoff the way a rube at a
county fair ogles the bearded lady, wonderingly. If I had the
guts, Mr Sudikoff, Id bench them both for the whole road
trip and leave them here to do scut work. But I lack em, I lack
em.
Well, sir, theyd probably only fight if you left em here
without any supervision, Sudikoff said.
My rationale for taking them with us, Mr Sudikoff
Sir?
Hush, please. Ive got something important to do here.
He looked at me. Gentlemen, let me reintroduce you to
Daniel Boles. Mr Boles, please rise.
I stood up.
Would you like to greet your teammates?
Huh-hello, I said.
Henry and Double Dunnagin led the room in a rapid
clatter of applause. I smiled and bowed.
Cottontons ballpark, The Fields, looked
like what the localsd named it, a big seashell fan of graded
earth with no fences, no lights, no grass, and no clear-cut
boundary with the cotton-growing acreage next to it. The Boll
Weevils had a chicken-wire backstop, termite-gnawed bleachers
along the baselines, and a shingled crate on telephone-pole
pilings for a press box. As Mister JayMac had said in my first
team meeting in Highbridge, a live goatd once figured in a
close decision at third. Even in Oklahoma, Id seen boondocky
high schools with better facilities than the Weevils had.
But sometimes they drew decent crowdsfrom whistle-stop
and cotton-ginning communities all over the county. You
could get four or five hundred people in the stands, even on a
week night: farmers, railroad workers, gin operators, feed-and-seed
merchants, beauticians, kids. Clem Eggling, a gin operator
with a thousand acres of prime Alabama farmland, owned the
club and at age forty-six still sometimes caught the opening
game of a twin bill. He made his money scrimping on
groundskeeping costs, salaries, and ballpark goodies. Watery
lemonade, boiled eggs, and culled peanuts dominated the items
at his refreshment stands, and you couldnt get iceshaved,
cubed, or meltingunless you hauled it in yourself in an
expensive refrigerated truck.
On Wednesday, with Muscles and Curriden out, we lost
to the lowly Weevils by six runs. Hoey took Curridens spot at
third, and Evans and Fanning subbed about four innings each
in left field for Musselwhite. They fielded their places okay,
but every Hellbender except Charlie Snowd forgotten how to
hit, and the loss, again except for Snows bang-up play, qualified
as a disconcerted team effort. Hard to say if Miss
LaRainas rivals in the lineup wouldve made a whit of difference.
The Boll Weevils pitcher, Hub Sisti, had us muttering to
ourselves all evening.
In Cottonton, Henry and I stayed in a truckstop court
called Edweenas Comfy Cabins. If Cottontond ever had a
hotel for farm-equipment suppliers and haberdashery drummers,
itd long since closed. Edweenas Comfy Cabins got our
business by default. Mister JayMac seldom had us leave Highbridge
for an away series against the Weevils until the morning
of our first game. That strategy ran the risk of a forfeit, if the
Brown Bombers transmission dropped out, but it cut back our
dependence on local lodgings. Henry and I had our ready-made
digs, of course, but Cottonton natives willing to house
enemy ballplayers didnt run that deep or that trustworthy.
Mister JayMac had to squeeze eighteen guys into three semi-friendly
houses, and on our last road trip there in 43, he
negotiated the use of an empty jail cell, a bus-station pew at
Harshanay Drugs, and two more Comfy Cabinsto keep
from returning to the home of Weevils fans upset by our
one-sided romps over every Cottonton hurler but Hub Sisti.
Darius remained the odd man out. He knew coloreds in
other CVL towns, but didnt seem to know any here. He
couldve had a black family put him up a night or two just by
asking. Darius had a certain status. Driving the Bomber, doing
for twenty or so ballplayers, made him a figure of some glamour.
But Darius wouldnt play on his league connections.
Wouldnt sweet-talk, trash-talk, or kowtow. Wouldnt even ask
outright and humbly, one downtrodden colored to another, for
a cleanly place to lay his head. Pride and a festering resentment
of Mister JayMac stymied him.
Not long after Hub Sistid shut us out, I stood in the
open door of the Comfy Cabin called Gladiola Delight ruing
my third hitless game in twenty-four starts. You could smell
the DDT on the cotton plants across the road, and the used-washcloth
odor of the linens in Gladiola Delight. Other
Comfy Cabins were named Begonia Bliss, Daisy Dream, Marigold
Manor, and Chrysanthemum Heaven. They all looked
and smelled the same, though, and the only flowers in their
rotting window boxes were dandelions and morning glories.
As I stood there, the Bomber growled past on the
blacktop from The Fields, where wed played our last two
innings in the dusk. It headed into the empty landscape north
of town.
D-Darius, I said.
Looking for a place to sleep unmolested, Henry said
from behind a book. The poor slob. That was Henrys shaky
grasp of American slang. He meant chap, or bugger, or joe, not
slob, but I knew that.
Back l-l-later. Before Henry could call out a question,
Id trotted to the blacktop. I hiked along it in the dark behind
the twin embers of the buss taillights. Darius drove slow,
maybe to keep a redneck cop from halting him, maybe to give
himself a better chance to find a hidden parking place for the
nightso those taillights stayed visible for a long time. I
followed them easily. I lost ground, of course, but the roads
straightness kept the bus in view. Sometimes I could even hear
its gears shifting, a sound like rocks bumping down a metal
chute.
A mosquito came out of the cotton after me. Two or
three damn mosquitoes. A blood-sucking platoon of em. Water
lay oily in one shadowy ditch, a breeding ground. The blacktop
gave way to gravel. The bigger pieces of gravelfist-sized
rocksthrew me off-stride. I had to find a tire rut and walk in
it like a man in a narrow trench. Off to the west, the long
charcoal profile of some eroded hills told me I hadnt walked
into the unbounded landscape of a nightmare. And a glance to
my rear revealed the untidy lamp-lit boxes of Edweenas Comfy
Cabins. I could go back if I had to.
Suddenly, the Brown Bombers taillights jinked out of
view and its hippoish side appeared in silhouette: a black
rectangle with windows into a bigger blackness. Sound of rocks
sliding on tin. The buss nose, behind its headlights, kept
moving downward until a berm of earth and night had eaten
the lights and swallowed the entire bus. Now I had no floating
embers to follow and no sure way to recognize Dariuss turnoff
when I came to it.
I kept walking. The DDT smell and the edgeless blackness
all around me made me think Id traipsed into the limbo
where sick or worried people go when they filch a wink or two
of shuteye from their pain. Nowhere. I groped along, though,
and came to the side road, a dirt trail, where Dariusd vanished.
Every step down this trail sent a lightning bolt up my spine.
Shrubbery clustered near, and some sort of tree, an orphan
plum or holly, grew up from the inlet of a cotton field, shielding
most of the Bomber but its hood. Idve never found the
bus at the bottom of this cut without tracking it from my
cabins very doorstep. I went up to the Bomber and banged on
its side.
Behind me, a revolvers hammer clicked. A gun barrel
poked me in the neck.
Tell me fast what the hell you want.
Darius. (No stammer.)
Jesus, Danl, that you? The pistol barrel stopped poking
me. Man, you coulda got kilt. What you doing here?
After saying his name, I couldnt get another clear word
out. Darius cursed and forced me up into the Bomber, whose
engine was still cooling, popping and ticking. He prodded me
down the main aisle to the long seat at the back.
This spots yo favorite. Anyway, its somebodys.
Sit.
Somehow, in that blackness, Darius seemed solider than
me. I was a ghost, my skin and bones leached out and water-thin.
Without his hand around my upper arm, Idve vaporized
into the stars like some kind of pale gas.
Sorry bout the gun. I uz taking a leak when you hit the
road and come slapping down. Nigh on to scairt the piss back
into me, white boy.
That was funny, I guess, but I couldnt laugh. Darius
showed me his piece again, a snub-nose with a mother-of-pearl
handle. He held it not to threaten, but to give me a chance to
admire the way it shone in the cloudy starlight slanting in.
They come to neck-burn me, Danl, well, I send a few on
ahead befo I have to tap-dance air. He pocketed the revolver
in his khaki work pants. Whatn hell you want?
You sl-sleep here?
On the Bomber? Sho. Better than a Comfy Cabin any
day but Christmas. Plenty of beds to pick from. No loud
radios playing. Hot and hot running breezes. Yeah, I sleep
here.
Out in the c-country?
I like my privacy.
What about over in Quitman? Or L-Lanett?
What are you anyways, official Hellbender bed-checker?
Or you jes want to thow yo pity at me?
My tongue rolled up behind my top front teeth and stuck
like a wet cabbage leaf.
Suppose I thow it back, Danl? Daddy dead. Yo mouth
dont work. Rooming with old Mumbo-Jumbo Clerval. How
you like my pity dripped on you like sorghum?
Not much. Turnabout maybe represented fair play, but it
mocked my Christian concern for Darius by putting my own
dumb mug in the mirror he held up. He hummed something
bluesy and reached a paper sack out from under our seat. The
sack held a bottle. Pray God it isnt sloe gin, I thought.
Darius swigged, wiped his mouth, and offered me a pull.
It stank like sour-mash whiskey, the cheapest and strongest
kind. I shook my head.
Lissen, Danl. In nearlybout every CVL city but Cottonton,
I know womens. Who give me rest, and take it too, and
give it back again. Only in this redneck town do I got to park
in the boonies to nab my Zs. Some ways, though, its a relief.
Its peaceful. He swigged again. The part that aint, aint got
nothing to do with where I sleep. It got to do with how I live.
Only times I live jes like I want, Im sleeping, and where I do it
dont strip it down tojabbing his chin at the snow-blanket
mirage of the nearby cottonto that, to what you can see out
a window or pint to on a map.
I said, Y-yeah, and got up. Darius didnt try to stop
me. Id trespassed his private property, even if it moved with
him like the dusty shell of a turtle.
Better foot it back. I done found my spot, and toting
you backs like to stir some pleecemans to hassle me out of
here.
I laddered up the aisle, plucking each seat back to keep
from falling over.
Shhhhhhh, Darius shushed me. Loud.
Did he really think Clem Eggling or some other clay-footed
rube out here in deepest Alabamastan was going to hear
me? I glanced back through the gloom. Darius toasted me with
his bottle and canted his head to one side.
Look down. And hush yo plinking. You gon wake the boy.
I looked. A good-size bundle lay on a seat about midway
along the bus, a lumpy smudge on the cushion. It breathed. I
squatted for a closer study: Euclid, Dariuss half brother and
our sometime batboy, depending on if the away park in question
would let him fetch for us. Ordinarily, Mister JayMac
made him stay in Highbridge. The only way I could imagine
him getting to Cottonton was by stowing away in the luggage
bin. Tonight, Euclid slept like a rain-ripened bag of concrete
mix, heavy and hard,
Tuckered, Darius said. Prostrated by his ride over.
No kidding. But Euclids being huddled there cheered
me. Darius had some company, a pick-me-up warmer than his
whiskey and not quite so dire as his handgun.
Anything happen to me, Darius said, that boy got to
git past it to his own tomorry. Remind him o that, Danl.
Remind him? What could happen to Darius? He could
drink himself to a retching stupor. He could use his pistol to
take a core sample of his own gray matter. That scared menot
the first notion, but the second. A barn owl hooted from
somewhere off-road, and the tremolo of its call echoed through
the bus like a sighing brake. How could I leave?
Go on. You done misunderstood me. Im okay. Got me
no-hitters to thow, homers to knock. Jes caint figger out
where. Anyways, git! I climbed down into the velvety dust.
Darius slid over to an open window and peered out at me.
Quip hadnt no sass on his speedball tonight. Too bad.
Mine a turned them Weevil bats to dick sponge. Everybody
knows it, but aint nobody gon let it happen.
G-g-good night, I said.
Darius had parked behind a full-blown holly. The needle
tips of its glossy leaves pricked me as I squeezed past it to the
path up to the main road. A bauble of moon-varnished blood
erupted on one thumb, and I sucked it as I walked.
Darius didnt shoot himself or Euclid. He
didnt drive the Bomber off to Birmingham to cadge a tryout
with the Black Barons or to Moton Field near Tuskegee in
hopes of becoming a replacement flyer in the air squadron
commanded by Benjamin O. Davis, Jr. He showed up at The
Fields the next afternoon at three and spent about twenty
minutes briefing our regulars on how to hit the Boll Weevil
starting hurlers best pitch, a forkball. We hit it. We hit it so
often Eggling yanked the guy by the fourth.
After that, all the homies in Cottontons open-sided flea
box hung around less to root their Weevils on than to watch
our starters, even Curriden and Musselwhite, put on a power-hitting
show that made their fielders wish Eggling had anted
up enough cash money for a fenceto spare them the shame
of chasing down balls that in any other CVL park wouldve
been ground-rule home runs. To compensate, they started
playing deeper and deeper, but guys like Junior, Skinny, Dunnagin,
Snow, and me countered by dropping Texas leaguers in
front of them like mortar shells.
We whipped Cottonton by fourteen runs, to achieve a
split, and drove to Lanett the next morning for a four-game
weekend serieswith Euclid out of the luggage bin and in a
front seat across from Mister JayMac. (He got chewed out for
stowing away, thoughroyally chewed out.) At Chattahoochee
Field, the Linenmakers, even though last in league standings,
played us tough as cross-tie spikes. We split with them too,
winning on Friday night, dropping both ends of a Saturday
twin bill, and nosing by them on Sunday on Henrys home
run, his twenty-eighth of the season, twelve more than the next
guy, Lon Musselwhite, a teammate, and Ed Bantling, the Gendarme
catcher.
Mister JayMac publicly thanked Henry during one of our
Rolling Assizes for salvaging the road trip. Even so, he had
Muscles fine every relief pitcher, pinch hitter, and starter whod
contributed to Saturdays fiasco against Lanett. The only Hellbenders
to escape fines were Snow, Nutter, Dobbs, and Henry.
Even the Honorable Judge Lionel K. Musselwhite had to dig
into his coin purse for a quarter, for turning a long fly ball into
a triple by overrunning it and denting a signboard.
Needless and catastrophic showboating, prosecutor
Buck Hoey called the play. You let in two runs and bunged up
your shoulder to boot. The captain ought to set us something
other than a bad example. You got the idea Hoey was disguising
a reference to the dustup on Hellbender Pond between
Muscles and Curriden. Anyway, nobody on the Bomber voted
for clemency.
Darius didnt say two words from his seat up front, and I
couldnt help wondering what kind of fine hed draw for
packing a concealed pistol. More than a quarter, Id bet. In some
places down here, he couldve wound up decorating a tree just
for leaving his fly at half-mast.
On Tuesday evening, the bigs played
their first-ever night all-star game. Everyone in McKissic
House heard the broadcast from Philadelphia over our cathedral
Philco. Worldwide, U.S. servicemen listened with us over
shortwave radios. Actually, Henry opted out of our party, the
only resident Hellbender not on hand. Hed trudged upstairs
to read, saying, Baseball is not my entire life. In any case, at
breakfast Mr Mariani will recount every pitch and putout.
I missed Henrys being there. Dunnagin sat on a folding
chair next to me, but he and Creighton Nutter, whod come
over from Cotton Creek, picked at each other through the
whole game. As an ex-Brownie, Dunnagin wanted the American
League to win, while Nutter, an ex-Brave, rooted like crazy for
Johnny Vander Meer and the senior-circuit Nats. Most of the
rest of us, chattel of the Phutile Phillies, automatically sided
with Nutter against Dunnagin. Vander Meer and Vince
DiMaggio played like shining princes for their squad, but when
the Americans won it five to three, Dunnagin danced around
the parlor on his spindly gams. Darius spent the entire game
leaning in the door to the dining room, but vanished a split
second after the last broadcast play.
When I went up to tell Henry the outcome, he lay face
down on his bed, softly wheezing away.
At Wednesday mornings optional
workout at McKissic Field, a major from the camp and a
colored guy in a bottlefly-green jacket came onto the field just
as I started to enter the batting cage. The major, a young guy
with a razor slit of a mouth, put his hand on my arm.
Excuse me, kid, he said. Im Major Adrian Dexter.
This is Mr Cozy Bissonette.
I stared. That kid business burned me off. Major Dexter
looked about twenty-six. Besides, visitors, outside of family
and invited guests, had no standing ticket to our workouts.
A stadium guard let us in, Major Dexter said, nodding
at the entrance tunnel. We have an appointment. I still didnt
speak. With Mr Jordan McKissic, the owner and manager.
He pronounced the first name like the rivernot JUR-dan,
the way locals did. Could you direct us to him, please?
Wed be decidedly grateful, Cozy Bissonette said.
C-cmon. I led them to our dugout, where Mister
JayMac sat with Darius, strategizing for our next away series.
Darius looked up, and he and Mr Bissonette each did a
funny click thing with their eyesalmost a shutter snap, like a
photographer catching a big-deal event and not just another
family-album head shot. Major Dexter and Mister JayMac
didnt see it, and I couldnt read it. It didnt work only on the
level of one colored greeting another, though; it also involved
the sort of flash conspiracy that can happen between any two
like-thinking persons, whoever they are. It scared me.
Are we early? Major Dexter said. We could always
Fine, Mister JayMac said. Ill jes be a moment.
I stayed there in the dugout, cat-curious and vexed, hoping
to learn something.
Go hit, Mister JayMac told me. Ill handle the coaching
details. You jes do what youre paid for. He gave me a face
smile, with nothing but distracted cogitation behind it.
I spike-walked back out to the batting cage.
That evening, Mister JayMac held a team
meeting in the parlor. No flip charts. No recruits to introduce.
No rules to review. Of the Cotton Creek bunch, Snow and
Nutter seldom griped about anything, but Hoey, Sloan, Hay,
and Sudikoff waltzed in bellyaching, having earlier supposed
theyd have the whole day to themselves. They put a lid on it
when they saw Mister JayMac impatiently pacing the hardwood.
This shouldnt take too long, he said. Weve got a vote
to take.
I vote no, Hoey said. Whatever it is.
Be it resolved, Dunnagin said, that we
refrain from castrating Buck Hoey the next time he fans with men on
base.
Even Hoey laughed. (Henry only smiled, but, given it was
Henry, count it a laugh.)
This shouldnt take long unless every one of yall insists
on auditioning for The Grape Nuts Hour. Mister JayMac said.
We ditched our smirks. Darius, I noticed, leaned exactly
where hed leaned during the all-star game.
This morning, the business manager of a barnstorming
club of Negro ballplayers, the Splendid Dominican Touristers,
and an Army major from the
Whoa, Hoey said. The who?
The Splendid Dominican Touristers. Some Negro
leaguers under a rubric de guerre, so to speak.
Sounds like an order of stuck-up traveling monks, Turkey
Sloan said.
Shut up, Sloan, Vito Mariani said.
Before an argument could break out, Mister JayMac said, Hush.
Everybody hushed. The Negro American Leaguethe Black
Barons from over to Birmingham, the Memphis Red
Sox, the Cincinnati Clowns, and so onwell, gas rationings
hit these clubs hard. Theyve done finished a full split season.
Their teams only had to play thirty games to qualify for the
Negro World Series. Anyway, Mr Cozy Bissonette of Kansas
City, Missouri, has assembled a group from some of the
NALs better players, and hes seeking exhibition opponents in
advance of the clubs official formation in Atlanta early next
week.
And the coon wants to play us? Jerry Wayne Sosebee
said.
Darius had his arms folded and his gaze fixed on a knot-hole
in the floors oak planking. Sosebee didnt see him,
though; Darius was invisible to Sosebee.
What about this Army major? Muscles asked Mister
JayMac.
Major Dexter. First Battalion, Camp Penticuff Special
Training Regiment. He wants to sponsor a contest between
Mr Bissonettes all-stars and us, a morale booster to kick off
the clubs barnstorming tour.
Sir, Georgia law doesnt allow whites and coloreds to
play pro ball against each other in public, Sloan said.
Thats why, if yall vote to do it, wed do it out to Camp
Penticuff, where it wouldnt be so public. For the biggest part,
our spectators would be the Negro GIs of the two Special
Training battalions out there.
Jesus, Sosebee said.
Whats in it for us? That was Reese Curriden. Sometimes
you could hear pocket change in his chuckles.
The Army, Major Dexter says, has offered a payment of
five hundred dollars to each club, to divvy however we choose.
Twenty-five bucks apiece! Quip Parris cried happily.
I vote yes, Hoey said. Whichever way we divvy it.
Id recommend returning the money as a contribution to
the war effort, Mister JayMac said.
Except like that, Hoey said. What are we anyway, a
pack of no-account field hands?
Tote that bat, lift that base, Sloan said.
What will the Dominican Jigaboossorry, Touristersdo
with their five hundred? Sosebee asked.
I dont know, Mister JayMac said. Keep it, I imagine.
Theyve got big expenses, their players need the money.
I need the money, Hoey said. Ever try to feed four
house apes on a hundred-plus a month?
Hoeys making a hundred-plus a month? Musselwhites
eyes went round, like such a salary staggered him.
Hold it, Sosebee said. You want us to play a bunch of jigsuh,
coloredsin front of a bunch of coloreds, and to do it
for nuthin?
For the morale of the recruits, Mister JayMac said.
For the joy of it. To face a squad of unknown players as good
as, if not a smidgen better than, ourselves.
Trapdoor Evans said, They could ever one of em out-play me
from here to Timbuctoo, sir, but theys still no wayno
way in hellitd make a one of em bettern me.
You said it, Sudikoff said.
Who plans to suit up for this Mr Bossy Nut fella on
his Splendid Dominican so-and-sos? Curriden asked. A
whole club of Negro League all-stars?
No, Mister JayMac said. Jes better-than-most journeymen
players. Yall wont have to face the likes of Satchel
Paige, Josh Gibson, or Cool Papa Bell.
Who? Fadeaway Ankers said.
But never you fear, these barnstormersll make
LaGranges Gendarmes look like beginning Little Leaguers.
Henry spoke up from the back of the room. When
would we play them, if we played?
Good question, Mister JayMac said. Two Tuesdays
from now, the twenty-seventh of July. The only time our
schedule permits.
No peace for the pooped, Muscles said. Couldnt this
screw our shot at the pennant, Mister JayMac?
One game? Maybe. But only if Mr Clerval has a heart
attack walloping one to the Canary Islands.
Lets v-v-vote, I said.
I dont play coloreds, Fadeaway said. Teams of
em.
Me either, Evans said.
Ditto, Sloan said. To do great on a jig hunt, / Wear
chocolate pigment / Exactly like your preys. / Thank God
Ive never gone through that phase.
Thank you, Mr Longfellow, Mister JayMac said.
Thats three outright nays, I take it. Any more?
Here, Sudikoff said. No!
And here, Sosebee said. No!
Last chance, Mister JayMac said. Five nays to what I
guess is fifteen unvoiced ayes.
I abstain, Pete Hay said.
What a pussy, Mariani said.
What do you mean, a pussy? Hay said.
A fence sitters got no balls, Mariani said.
Hush, Mister JayMac said. Id hoped for unanimity in
this vote. Virtual unanimity. But when a quarter of you have
reservations about the appropriateness of this game, it gives me
pause. I wonder about the commitment of the nay-sayers to
play their hardest.
Cripes, sir, Sloan said. Dont try to blackmail an aye
out of us with this commitment guff. I mean, we
Yallre scairt youll git whupped, Darius said.
Every head in the room turned towards him. He lifted his
gaze from the floor and drilled Sloan with it.
Ten dollars to every No sez them Dominicansll smack
yall like a babys butt. If you got the grit to play em.
You aint got fifty bucks to bet, Trapdoor Evans said.
You aint got ten to bet me.
Darius strode like a crop fire up to Mister JayMac. Give
me fifty, sir. Gainst my nex draw.
Mister JayMac took a money clip from his seersucker
jacket, peeled off five tens, and slapped them into Dariuss
palm.
Darius walked through the crowded parlor to Henry and
gave him the five tens. Mister Henry, hold this please. If yall
vote it unanimous to play Mr Cozys boys, the bets on. Yall
win, I pay. Hellbenders lose, like yall gon to, I git ten each
from Mr Ankers, Mr Sloan, Mr Sudikoff, Mr Sosebee, and
the bettern-anybody-colored Mr Evans.
One by one, the nay-sayers changed their nays to ayes and
walked over to Henry to give him either a ten-spot or a signed
IOU; then they returned to their places. Henry arranged the
wager money in his billfold and then slid the billfold into his
frock coat. Jumbo Hank Clerval, reluctant bookie.
I want in, Hay said. I vote nay too.
You abstained, Mister JayMac said. Elections over. I
dont hold with gambling, especially for players. Except this is
gonna be a unofficial exhibition, Id veto it here too.
Youre a paragon, sir, Buck Hoey said.
Mister JayMac ignored him. Our next votes on the
Armys lump-sum payment. Do we return it, or do yall divvy it
mongst yourselves?
Uh-oh. Which way did you jump on this one? Patriotism
or self-interest?
Curriden said, Look. Well support the war effort by
playing a game for Camp Penticuffs darky recruits. He
looked at Darius. Aint that enough? Do we have to fork over
our pay too? Bet you a pork side, Mr Cozys boys keep theirs.
I dont care what yall do with yo money, Darius said.
We should keep it, Hoey said.
Sloan and friends also voted to keep and divvy the
Armys payment, and almost everyone else, including Snow and
Nutter, fell in line. Even Henry voted with the mercenary
majority, a surprise to me because he had his secret atonement
agenda to fulfill and I thought hed go for the sacrifice. Then I
heard his reason.
If we return our fee to the Army, he said, they may use
it to purchase weaponry and ordnance.
So? said Sudikoff.
I abhor the making and distribution of implements that
in any wise maim or kill, Henry said.
That kind of talk didnt go during the war. It really didnt
go in the South. Hitler wanted a hiding, and the Japs deserved
any swift-kick comeuppance American determination and
know-how could give them. The parlor lapsed into a silence
broken only by mumbles.
If thats how folksll read us taking the Armys money,
Charlie Snow finally said, I vote to give it back.
Jumbos a crank on that point, Muscles said. Nobodyll
read it that way.
The greater shame, Henry said.
In the end, of course, we voted to keep and divvy. Only
Lamar Knowles and Dunnagin voted to return the honorarium
to the government. Me, I went with the majority, but even
today I cant tell you if my reasons were more like Curridens
or Henrys. Of all the Hellbenders there, only Mister JayMac
and Darius had failed to vote on the two issues before us.
Anyway, the meeting started to break up.
Hold it! Mister JayMac jammed his hands in the pockets
of his seersucker coat, stretching it out of true. I should
tell yall, the nature of this exhibition contest offers me some
managerial latitude I dont have in the CVL.
What the hell did that mean?
I plan to start Darius on the mound.
That news goosed the gee-whilikers out of us. Should we
hurrah or squawk? Trapdoor Evans said, Jesus, sir, he could
queer the whole game a-purpose jes to take Turkey and my and
these other saps money.
Its more than that, Muscles said. If we win, and if
Darius finishes the game for us, them colored recruitsnot to
mention them Splendiferous Whozitswill say it was because
one of their own was throwing for us.
Thats precisely the point, Mister JayMac said.
Why? Muscles said. Why?
Mister JayMac looked over at Darius and winked: an
open wink, like an open letter. Darius glanced off, the hinges
in his jaw bulging.
And if we lose, Muscles said, itll all come down to us
not backing our pitcherin their eyes, I mean. In their eyes,
well either ride Dariuss arm to a win or jap him with sloppy
backup and weak-sister hitting.
And if we lose, Evans said, Darius picks our pockets.
I dont want to pitch this one, Darius said. Give me
some respect, Mister JayMac. Gimme some respect.
Mister JayMac spoke to everybody: Those who watch us
and those who compete against us will judge each player on his
own performance. Remember that. End of meeting.
That same week, we had two home games
against Lanett and three against Cottonton. We won the first
four, but dropped our Sunday finale to the Weevils by a single
run. Hub Sisti pitched against us, and Muscles afterwards
claimed Sisti had Vander Meer blood, even if hts name
sounded Eye-talian.
The night before, Id eaten dinner at the Pharram house
in Cotton Creek, a clapboard box with blue shutters, porcelain
knickknacks in the open boxes of its wooden porch columns,
and an old-fashioned swing on the porch itself. Miss LaRaina
and Phoebe had lived in the officers housing out to Camp
Penticuff before Captain Pharrams assignment overseas, but
now they rented this place from Mister JayMac. Unless theyd
done an all-out tidy-up for me, the Pharram women seemed to
keep that house as trim and eye-fetching as a Fabergé egg.
All in all, a nice date. Phoebed given me a rain check for
the night Curriden abducted me to The Wing & Thigh. She
fixed exactly what shed fixed then: fried chicken, snap beans,
mashed potatoes. Only this time, I got to eat it hot.
More tea? Phoebe said. More biscuits?
Sh-sure, I said.
Im so proud you can talk, Miss LaRaina said. I feared
yalls babies wouldnt be able to. Phoebe folded her napkin
and retreated head-up to the kitchen. A joke. And the girl flies
to Tokyo.
Phoebe returned, opened out her napkin, and laid it
across her lap. Mama, heredity dont work that way. Acquired
traits dont pass. Dont hammer us with sech nonsense.
Miss LaRaina flicked her fingers at her plate. Deep in her
mouth, she made noises like bomb explosions. Phoebe pretended
her mama didnt exist.
I forgot yore tea, she told me formally. I forgot yore
biscuits. She went to get them.
The next night, Phoebe and I rode into
town to see Abbott and Costello in Hit the Ice at the Exotic and
almost laughed our fannies off. On the taxi ride home, I
wanted to smooch her silly, to spaniel-crawl her tit-wren body,
but the driver kept checking out the rearview and blithering
about that afternoons loss to Hub Sisti.
In Cotton Creek, I asked him to wait and walked Phoebe
to her doorstep.
There, under the pecan boughs, we kissed for the first
time since Mr Roosevelts visit, pushing in to each other. We
took so long about it the cabby gave a crabby beep on his horn.
His meter kept clicking the coins in my pocket into his, of
course, but he wanted sleep worse than he did a fat fare.
Phoebe broke from me. Gnight, Danny.
I smiled.
What is it? she asked me.
This time you didnt f-fart.
This time I didnt eat no Brunswick stew, she said, like
that put me in my place. She banged through the screen door.
On the porch, a skinny shadow, she hunched her shoulders and
gave me a finger-wave toodle-do.
Phoebe might like me, but Buck Hoey didnt. He didnt try to disguise
his feelingsfrom me, his teammates, or his wife. He didnt like
it Id stolen his position.
(Who would?) He didnt like my looks. (Neither did I,
but the willingness of Henry, Kizzy, and the Pharrams to
tolerate emd almost broken me of cringing away from mirrors.)
And he really didnt like me doing so well at bat and in
the fieldbecause he, Turkey, and Trapdoor couldnt go on
accusing me of being a fuckup and a goat. I led every Bender
but Snow in batting, and Snow led the CVL. With my lead-off
slot and on-base percentage, Idve probably led the league in
runs scored except for missing the seasons first fifteen games.
Hoey didnt hit or field that badly, but had serious weaknesses
in some fundamentals: executing the hit-and-run, bunting,
flipping underhand to second on double-play chances,
and, if coaching, keeping his signals straight. Nowhere, though,
was there a feistier wiseacre in baseball, except for the Dodgers
Leo Durocher, and most Highbridgers wouldve bet on Hoey
in a dirt-kicking and insult-flinging contest between the two. I
would have.
Hoeyd dodged the Army because his status as a father
put him in the sixth lowest draft category: Married Men With
Children But Without a Contributing Job. Three of his kidsMatt,
Carolyn, and Tedhad come before Pearl Harbor. His age,
thirty-five or so, and some stress-related back twingesd also
played a part in saving him from an infantry platoon. Linda
Jane, Hoeys Alabama-born wife, and all four kids, including a
toddler named (hold on) Danny, came out to nearly every home
game. Hoey always worked his two older boys into warm-up
pepper games, which made you think Uncle Samd done right
allowing him to stay home to help raise his brood.
Matt and Ted, about ten and seven Id guess, didnt seem
to hate my guts. Much as he disliked me, Hoey hadnt
spoon-fed his bitterness into his sons gap-toothed mouths. They let
me hit them pepper fungoes. More than once, they waved to
me from the grandstand when they caught my eye at shortstop.
(Linda Jane, on the other hand, always wrinkled up her nose at
me like shed chanced upon a supermessy roadkill, a polecat,
say, or an armadillo.) Early on, itd impressed the boys I
couldnt talk; and it tickled them, every day I played, that their
baby brother and I had the same first name. So they never
tossed any smart-ass digs my way.
In fact, after our Saturday doubleheader against the Boll
Weevils, Matt jumped onto the field from the Hoeys box seats
and sprinted out to see me. I mean, that humdinger of a kid
intercepted me. He stuck a program and a pencil under my nose.
Sign it, wouldja, Mr Boles? Yore the best danged Mile
Bender theys ever been!
Teddy! his mother called from her box. Teddy, you git
on back up here!
I wisht I could play like you. I wisht I could.
I took his program and began to write my name across
the top of it. Buck Hoey slipped in next to his son and yanked
the program away.
Leave him be, Ted. Hes wore out.
Wont hurt him to write his name, Pa, Teddy said. I
got bout ever other Benders graph. I need Mr Boless to have
em aw.
You dont need a fritty thing, snip, Hoey said.
Look, Pa. He dont mind.
Id yanked the program back to resume scrawling DANNY BOLES on it.
You back-talking me, Ted? You defying my say-so?
Nosir, Im ony asting him to
Well, dont! You hear me! DONT! Hoey reclaimed the
program and tore it to bits. Stop that nancy-boy bawling,
Ted! STOP IT! He grabbed Teds upper arm and jerked him
this way and that trying to make him stop crying, which
worked about as well as kicking a dog draws it to you. Teddy
got loudernot defying Hoey, just giving in to his hurtand
Hoey boxed his ear: wham! wham! wham! wham! WHAM!
Henry caught Buck Hoeys wrist and twisted it back on
him. You dont wish to do that, he said. You fail to project
the psychological repercussions.
So youre my lousy self-appointed bug doctor, eh?
Hoey shook off Henrys grip and stepped sideways to slap Ted
again. Then he back-pedaled to the dugout, scolding Ted and
loudly cussing out Henry and me. Teds ear blazed like a night-light,
carbuncle red, and the hand print throbbing on his face
made him look like a war-painted Comanche.
Henry knelt to comfort Ted, and I stood there with my
eyes closed, a cascade of old Life magazine covers rampaging on
the screen of my memory.
Anyway, the deeper into July we went, the
more time Hoey spent riding the bench or pacing his coaching
box. Me, I played every game day, and I played in overdrive. I
dove for grounders, stole bases, chased down pop-up fouls
behind third, ran out bunts, legged long singles into doubles,
and bowled over or slid under catchers twice my size on shallow
sacrifice flies. I wore out my uniform pants, four pairs of
sanitary stockings, and, in an away series against Marble
Springs, my baseball shoes.
After hook-sliding around the Seminole shortstops tag
and asking for time, I got up to find the toe spikes on my shoe
torn from the sole and a gaping rip in the side panel. The
other shoe looked almost as bad. I could never run on those
dislodged spikes. Two steps would sprain my ankle or twist a
knee. I showed the base umpire, Jake Schact. Mister JayMac
came out to assess the damage, and the Seminole crowd booed
as he crossed the infield in his street clothes and again when
Hoey trotted over from the first-base coaching box to make it a
three-party powwow.
Dont put on a stall, Schact told Mister JayMac.
Whos stalling? Were out of shoes.
Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without a
wartime motto that Schact quoted. And hurry it up.
Unless you had an illegal hoard, there was no sure or
cheap way to replace rationed items, and Uncle Sam rationed
shoes, even baseball shoes. We mightve had an extra pair in my
size in Highbridge, but in Marble Springs the spare-pair
cupboard stood Mother Hubbard bare. Mister JayMac looked
hard at my shoes and then just that hard at Hoeys.
What size do you wear, Mr Boles?
N-n-nines.
And you, Mr Hoey?
Criminy, Hoey said. Jesus.
What size?
Nines. (The kind of confession you get from a fella
when you put him in a room with a blackjack crew.)
Give him yours, Mr Hoey.
Here?
Here and now.
Hoey sat on one half of the bag removing his spikes. I sat
on the other half unstringing mine.
Should I give him my jock too?
Please, Mr Hoey. Dont provoke a display of female
ardor beyond your capacity to quench.
The Seminole crowd whooped like picture-show Indians,
ready for the game to resume. Hoey, though, had to walk back
to the coaching box in his stirrup socks and clay-stained saintaries.
Between innings, he put on a pair of street shoes. It took
me a week to find my own replacements, though, and for that
week, Hoey wore a pair of boot-blacked slippers. From a
distance, they looked like the real things and kept fans from
ragging him, but this episode, on top of everything else,
guaranteed Id stay at the top of Hoeys shit list forever.
Thank God Phoebe cared for me. Thank God I had Henry for a protector.
My Second Life (continued)
. . . I heard shouts, laughter, and a mechanical sort of hooting.
Together, these noises enticed me from the woods, where I had made a shelter
of evergreen boughs, and onto the verge of an open fold. Here I saw a great
many men standing about in like-tailored coveralls and startling red blouses,
the blouses identical but for the different numerals in white on their backs.
One player, running towards me to retrieve a spherical object struck over his
head, showed across the front of his crimson blouse the word POINSETT. He and
his comrades, each with this same designation on their chests, had embarked
upon a sporting contest against some green-clad men wearing across their
shirts the epithet BRAGGADOCIO.
From considerably greater distances, I had seen, and given a prudent berth,
games of this raucous sort before. The Caucasian natives of the continental
hinterlandsby now I had made my way to northeastern Arkansascalled
their pastime base ball, but it had affinities to ball-and-stick
childrens games that I had encountered everywhere from Switzerland to
eastern Siberia. The rural version of this sport fascinated me, less for its
regulated intricacies than for its ability to assemble and amuse many diverse
persons.
In any event, I emerged from the woods.
On the outskirts of Poinsett, Arkansas, a hundred or more spectators
had gathered about the ill-marked field (known locally as the Strawberry
Diggings) on foot, in mule- or ox-drawn wagons, in surreys, and even in
self-propelled Model Ts. The drivers of these last vehicles, sometimes called
automobiles and sometimes Fords, would pull their movable windshields down
to preserve the glass from balls bludgeoned foul by the teams various batsmen.
Whenever those watching approved a development in the game, the
spectators on foot or in wagons would whistle, cheer, applaud, and stamp their
feet. Those in Model Ts would sound the signalling devices in their conveyances
to produce a festive cacophony. Perhaps this continual hubbub should
have warned me off; instead, it drew me, as a lamp does a moth.
The ball being pursued by the unsuspecting Poinsett outfielder rolled to
my feet. I stooped to pick it up and greatly agitated the man. His eyes, under
the narrow bill of a striped cap, grew wide, then hard. I tossed the ball to
him. He caught it in a thin glove from which the tips of his naked fingers
protruded like pale sausages. The cheers and honking from the devotees swelled
in volume and in anxiousness. Thanks, said the man. Turning, he threw
the ball in a low arc to a teammate at one congested corner of the
diamond. This disciplined heave and its skillful reception by a
teammate excited the local
enthusiasts to even louder approbation. I moved back into the shelter of the
woodsto watch the remainder of the contest from this vantage, without
detection by the spectators or further intrusion of myself into the game.
Afterwards, the man to whom I had tossed the ball ventured alone to
the edge of the evergreen stand. Sir, he said, if still here, please shew
yourself. I did, but my fulfillment of his request evoked his silent
wariness. He had above-average height and strength, but I stood three hands
taller and cast him in darkling shadow. Dont be afraid, I
said. I intend neither you nor your friends any harm. These words
clearly ameliorated his mood. He slipped from out my shadow and appraised me
with a look of most welcome sympathy.
That out you heped me git, he said in his rude dialect, was shore a
big un. Jes then, Mister, the game teetered more tards them than us,
but Flexners tag at third settled them Braggadocios boys
hash and skinned us through the tight. So thanks again. Thout yore
hep, Ida lost two weeks wages at Griscoms
dentistry office to Bruno Shaler.
It was my pleasure, said I, and the timbre of my voice occasioned
him another instant of unease. He quickly recovered and questioned me on
my knowledge of base ball and my best self-assessment of my plying skills. I
owned that my knowledge derived solely from observation; further, any talent
I might possess was that of an awkward tyro.
If you could hit jes a quarter lick yore size, you could take the
Poinsett Redbirds to a state championship, he said. Howdyou like a
weekday job at Griscoms? Let me thow you a few and see what
befaws, aw right?
The name of this outfielder and dentistry-office factotum was Jimmy
Brawley. Jimmy proceeded to test my abilities and to lesson me in the
rudiments of the pastime and sport to which he devoted most of his Saturday
and Sunday afternoons. When he experimentally pitched to me, at first
lobbing the ball, then hurling it with an uncouth ferocity, I excited his
admiration by launching seven of these latter pitches almost to the trees. My
bat was a modified wagon tongue that Jimmy had held back for me from the
equipment of his departed companions. He also had a leather-wrapped
india-rubber ball that he delivered from a slat laid down as the pitchers mark.
Finally, I propelled the ball into the very treetops of the woods wherein I had
sheltered, and neither Jimmy nor I could recover it.
My impromptu tryout ended on that account, but Jimmy wrung from
me through importunate flattery a commitment to appear in the Diggings for
a weekday-evening practice.
Tomorrow, said he.
Perhaps. I hardly trust my base-ball instincts, nor yet, Mr Brawley,
my
Jimmy, he told me. None of thatere mister rig-a-roo. Makes me
sound Im awready a laid-out stiff.
Nor, Jimmy, do I trust my ability to secure favour equal to your
own among your colleagues and supporters. It has ever been thus with me. I
offend by my appearance. I go down to dust an outcast because my body
incites not only revulsion but also a wholly unwarranted fear.
If you pound er to the treetops wunst or twicet a game, Sonny Man,
you could look like a shaved-butt coyote and nobody roundabouts Poinsettd
give a stale tea cake.
For nearly a week, I remained unperceived in the pine stand. At night,
however, I betook myself to the diamond on the Strawberry Diggings with a
burlap sack of pine cones and a stout bough with which to launch them. For
hours I practiced. The flanged configuration of the surface of the cones, along
with their relative lack of density, prevented me from propelling them far
beyond the fan of the infield, but the persistence with which I drilled instilled
in me, over time, great confidence. I decided to accept Jimmys challenge.
When I first shewed myself to the Poinsett Redbirds on a practice
afternoon, Jimmy introduced me to the players and to their manager, Almont
Rattigan. Against even the teams best hurler, I batted surprisingly well, but
fielded so ineffectually that Rattigan despaired of ever employing me, because
of the liability I would pose on defense. The less kind or more ignorant
Redbird players referred to me as Flatfoot, Lame Ox, Dropper, and Stoopnot.
Mr Rattigan advised me to quit base ball for coal mining, but Poinsett
had no mines.
Jimmy sought virtually alone to retrieve me from incompetence afield
and disfavor among his teammates. With old leather-wrapped balls, then with
a crate of mail-order Spaldeens, he tried my limited skills and augmented
them through repetition until only my lameness debarred me from excellence
as a fielder. This handicapthe consequence, I knew, of my own efforts to
humanise my monstrous physiqueI overcame through application, diligence,
and a style of chicanery in my self-positioning that the other Redbird fielders
later strove to emulate themselves. When I could find no one with whom to
practise, Jimmy advised, I should take myself to the vacant lot behind
Criscoms dentistry office and catapult a Spaldeen at its foundation for as
long as I could catch the rebounds. So much did I improve, through devotion
to this regimen, that within a week Rattigan had fitted me with an outsized
uniform and deployed me in vital town-team contests against Lepanto and
Fryes Mill. . . .
From before the Great War to the acme of the American Depression, I
changed my residence at least once a year. I eschewed a permanent home and
also the inevitability of my neighbours snoopery for a transient life and the
qualified privacy that mobility affords. I played town-team ball in Tennessee,
Mississippi, Louisiana, Missouri, Kentucky, Alabama, Texas, and Floridas
panhandle. I chose towns far enough apart from one another to prevent old
acquaintances or teammates from a prior affiliation from chancing upon me.
At intervals, I curtailed my participation for a year, two years, perhaps even
three, though I honed my skills even during these sabbaticals. Some towns, when
I played, gave me a monthly stipend$30 was the most munificentand
a sinecure such as sidewalk sweeping or crate handling that did not
monopolise my evenings or weekends. I purposely shunned human entanglements,
such as that I had enjoyed with Kariak in Oongpfk, and behaved
myself both on and off the field with as much sobriety and honour as I could,
given the transient nature of my allegiances and my wish to hold myself
emotionally aloof from my teammates, as well as from the communities that
supported us.
Why did I live? In the middle 1930s, with bread lines commonplace
and unemployment an evil contagion even in the remotest hamlets, I no longer
regarded my absorption into human society as a productive citizen as my
foremost aim. Playing ball, I realised, had become an end in itself, not a
means of such absorption. What now infused meaning into my days, whether
in Donigal, Missouri, or in Hurricane, Alabama, derived less from tiresome
social intercourse than from the galvanising physical sensations of hitting a
ball hard and far, and of throwing it with exactitude. Once I had wanted a
spiritual sharer, but now, drunk with the restored robustness of my borrowed
body, I wanted only faceless teammates and unending occasions to exercise my
intellectual and animal fatuities playing baseball. . . .
In the summer of 1940, I had a janitorial sinecure with a school in
Hurricane, up the Tensaw River from Mobile Bay, and the guarantee of at
least two town-team games a weekend. The part-owner of a minor-league
club in Mobile itself, having heard of my batting prowess, sought me out.
Despite the evident distress that my appearance caused him, he bestowed many
flowery compliments and offered money, women, and alcohol as inducements
to leave the Hurricane Hurricanes in favour of the Mobile Tarpons. Because
I had no use for these offers and hated his protestations of high esteem, I
declined. He departed from me both confounded by my gentlemanly refusals
of his overtures and angry with me for seeing through his dissimulations.
Soon thereafter, Mr Jordan McKissic of the Highbridge Hellbenders of the
Chatahoochee Valley League came to watch me play. A teammate told me of his
presence in the stands and informed me heatedly that only an addlepate
would decline a second invitation to a higher level of play. He seemed
sensible of the townwide conviction that although I had graciously shown my
loyalty to the Hurricane nine, I had also manifested irrefutable proof of my
foolish lack of self-regard. Should I reject another attractive offer, he supposed,
every other member of our club would inherit the taint of my simplicty, and
the name Hurricaner would soon stand synonymous with ninny, simpleton,
or dolt. I ignored this counsel and performed as I always performed; that is to
say, with intensity, diligence, and positivity. Indeed, I led the Hurricane
Hurricanes to victory.
Afterwards, Mr McKissic and I conferred. He did not recoil from me. His
smile had no falsity, his words no ulteriority. His offer of a regular
emolument, along with room and board, veiled no improper inducements or
counterweights. His proposal tempted me, but the glare of playing in a larger
city, with a major-league affiliate, subverted even the happy impression that
Mr, McKissics sincere demeanour and speech had forged. Neither riches nor
glory held any irresistible allure for me; I could fulfill my inbred need for
athletic self-expression in an unfenced meadow as well as in a lighted
stadium.
I disagree, said Mr McKissic. Youll never realise your full
capacities as an athlete until you play against men as good as, or perhaps even
better than, you. A home run against Joe Blow of the Fairhope Shrimpers
proves a good deal less than does a home run against Sundog Billy Wallace of
the Gendarmes. By the same token, a home run against Billy pales next to
one off Rapid Robert Feller of the Cleveland Indians.
This line of argument found a sympathetic resonance in me. Then,
sir, I said, I should try to play for a nine that periodically meets Mr
Fellers club.
But the only way to reach such a nine, Mr Clerval, is through a
training league such as the CVL.
To what summit of expertise could I aspire? Glory, though some may
dispute this assertion, did not beckon me. Rather, curiosity about the range of
my talents filled my thoughts, calling me to some practical resolution of the
question. In this way, Mr McKissic nearly secured my defection to the
Hellbenders. Mulling a host of maddening factors, I said nothing,
inadvertently prejudicing him to conclude that I would respond negatively.
Tell me what you want, Mr Clerval, said he. If it isnt against
my principles or terribly outlandish, I just might give it to you.
I catalogued and sorted through my wants. It scarcely took a minute,
but this minute protracted Mr McKissics anxiety to the utmost extent of its
elasticity.
For pitys sake, Mr Clerval, say something!
Occasional use of your automobile and instruction in its operation,
said I.
My automobile? And lessons in how to drive it?
Just so, I said. Those are my conditions.
All right. Done.
But I finished that season with the Hurricanes, as I had earlier pledged
to do, and soon forgot the compensatory pledges of the Hellbenders owner.
The following summer, though I greatly wanted to play, I determined
that my small fame in the Mobile Bay area had so far overthrown my
anonymity that I must resign for a time from public view to reestablish it. I
did so, passing the time through closeted reading and contemplation.
In early July, I relocated to eastern Alabama. There I apprenticed to a
laconic and seldom occupied blacksmith who understood that the automobile
had long since rung the death-knell of his profession. In any event, he led me
to proficiency in horseshoe making and harness repair while I educated him in
the esoteric niceties of scrimshaw painting and the making of fishing nets from
the sinew strands of whitetail deer. On December 7th, the Japanese executed
a disabling strike on the Pacific fleet of the United States, and my mentor,
against my ardent counsel, quit Skipperoille to enlist in the Army at Fort
Benning, Georgia.
For three and a half months, I oversaw the daily trade of my departed
teachers blacksmith enterprise. My income supported me in austere comfort.
With it, I rented an upstairs room in a shabby antebellum home belonging to
an eccentric widow. Miss Rosalind, as the townspeople knew her, smoked
Cuban cheroots, raised hairless chihuahua dogs, and wore jumpsuits adorned
with sequins. She viewed me as excellent company, not as a grotesque
curiosity. Indeed, she so heavily freighted my leisure, of which I had a severe
plenty, with such meandering local genealogies and such mazy accounts of her
dogs ills and achievements that upon occasion I would have preferred to be
shot. Moreover, the fumes from her cheroots pervaded my clothing, begot in me
migraines of excruciating tenacity, and called forth my tears. (This liquid
Miss Rosalind always misconstrued as a sign of my tender heart.) Often,
then, I felt indentured less to my smithery than to my landlady.
In April, Mr Jordan McKissic and his wife, Miss Giselle, stopped in
a handsome automobile outside the dingy garage in which I laboured. A player
of his, a young man recently taken into the Navy, hailed from Skipperville,
and the players mothers epistolary accounts of the giant who had moved to
town to assume the blacksmithery of Millard Goodsell had come to Mr
McKissics attention via the low route of boardinghouse gossip. After a visit
to his wifes cousin in Brundide, he had driven to Skipperoille seeking to learn
the truth of this gossip and the exact identity of the blacksmiths apprentice.
Ah, Mr Clerval, its you, said he. I renew my offer of
almost two years ago. Dont immediately say no. With a war on, baseball
at the training level needs an infusion of fresh talentor the return of
competent old talentmerely to survive.
He continued in this vein, appealing to my love of the sport, and
stressing what he regarded as my unsatisfactory present circumstances, to
finagle my consent. At length his words merely clanged, for the lack of useful
blacksmith work and the dubious benediction of Miss Rosalinds society had
predisposed me to accept his offer. He may not have noted this pliability in
me, however, for I stood in the crepuscular gloom of my garage like a yoked
ox, a harness over my shoulders and a bellows in tine hand, a figure of
almost Satanic apostasy and discouragement.
Then, Miss Giselle made a self-effacing appearance in the doorway, a
spectre of sunshine and organdy. She much resembled Elizabeth Lavenza
Frankenstein, the bride of my creator, as Elizabeth might have come to look
had I not slain her for my own revengeful purposes in the freshness of her
young womanhood. Miss Giselles eyes had not yet adjusted to the dinginess of
the garage; she had no cause to fall back in dismay at the sight of an ogre of
my bulk and hideousness; but, as her pupils contracted, it seemed that she
adjusted without strain or upset not only to the twilight in my unkempt shop
but also to the parodic human creature trapped in its gloom.
Jordan, I see youve found him, said she. Will it be much longer?
The suns ferociously hot.
Ill be along shortly, said Mr McKissic with a curtness I had never
heard from him before. Go back to the car. He somewhat relented. Or
stand under that sycamore. He nodded towards it. Mr Clerval and I have
an item or two more to discuss.
Mr Clerval, said the woman, although her husband had offered no
formal introduction.
Maam, said I, inclining my head.
She withdrew, leaving me stunned with reminiscences; and Mr
McKissic returned to his needless suasions, for, by now, I had determined to give
Miss Rosalind notice and to migrate to Highbridge. Mr McKissic nonetheless
reiterated his various incentives, including the many chances I would have to
try myself against redoubtable competitors.
Thank you, said I.
Anything else, Mr Clerval? asked Mr McKissic.
The occasional use of an auto, said I. And driving lessons.
Yes. Id forgotten. But never fear, youve got it. Report to spring
training as soon as you can.
Yes, sir.
And so began the latest chapter in the long chronology of my second life,
a tale whose theme remains occluded to its hero and whose end is not yet
told. . . .
On Tuesday, July 27, the ball field at
Camp Penticuff basked red and dusty in the sun. We rode out
to it in the Bomber, dressed out in our flannels, more anxious
than wed admit about taking on these Negro barnstormers in
front of a hopped-up crowd of colored GIs. Wed just come
off a five-game road trip (three wins, two losses), and the
Mockingbirds and the Gendarmes would play us three games
each at home towards the end of the week. I had the impression,
jouncing past the stripped-down barracks and the
parched parade grounds, that Muscles, Hoey, Dunnagin, and
some of the other Hellbender vets felt wed bitten off a chaw
big enough to choke us.
The stands out here already teemed with khaki-clad black
soldiers. They sat or stood in the main grandstand behind the
backstop or on portable metal bleachers a maintenance unit
had set up beforehand. The sun blazed, slapping the whole
sports and training complex like a huge catfish bladder on an
unseen stick. The very air seemed to stretch out and pop under
the blows. The Bomber pulled up, after the Splendid Dominicansd
already arrived, to some ear-splitting whistles.
Bout damn time! yelled somebody sun-sore and antsy.
We parked behind a fleet of ten- or twelve-year-old Buick
touring cars, dented and furred with rust; and the Splendid
Dominicans ran out onto the field. Until wed showed, theyd
apparently spent their time mingling with the troops: boosting
morale. Learning that about em lowered ours. It implied the
Dominicans (These guysre Dominicans like Im a Hawaiian,
said Turkey Sloan) hadnt felt obliged to warm up in advance
of our arrival. Two seconds after hitting the field, though, they
had a ball whipping around the horn like men born in spikes
and caps. I watched them from the Bomber while, outside the
fence around the park, Mister JayMac and Darius shook hands
with Mr Cozy Bissonette and Major Dexter.
Inside the bus, Fadeaway said, Cottonton all over againno
dugouts. Well bake in this sorry-ass sun. He had bench
time ahead of him, and I almost sympathized. Almost.
In baggy white flannelsshirts with numbers whip-stitched
to their backs and the letters SDT sewn to their cheststhe
Splendid Dominicans didnt seem much like black supermen.
Like us, they had guys built like fire hydrants, flag
poles, or haystacks. This one couldve pruned Azalea hedges in
Alligator Park, that one couldve tonged blocks of ice at the
cold plant. No doubt, though, that Cozy Bissonettes ragtag
bunch could hit and hustle.
All right, Mister JayMac said from up front. Pile off.
Criminy, well slide out on our own sweat, Parris said.
We got up and pushed through the aisle, looking for
relieffrom the heat, from our nerves, from the suspense of
taking on these colored unknowns, who, in their own cities,
had even more fans than we did in Highbridge.
I saw a few white facesbrass and senior NCOs, company
commanders and cowcatcher-jawed topkicks. But the
faces of the Negro GIs outnumbered the pasty or sunburnt
faces among them fifty-to-one. A dark sea in the stands: beige,
caramel, chestnut, shiny bruise-black. Even at a military post
deep in the heart of Dixie, those hundreds of young Negro
men shook me to my boots. What if they all got loose and we
had to wade through their strutting tide?
Darius touched my arm and urged me through a gate
onto the field. See? he asked. (Or was it Sea, like in body
of water?) When I glanced at him over my shoulder, he gave
me an unreadable smile.
The field had a press box, a platform on stilts that mayve
sometimes served as a reviewing stand. A goofy-looking white
lieutenant in wire-rimmed glasses sat behind a microphone on
the platform. His welcome blared out at us from metal speakers
mounted on creosoted poles.
Men of the First and Second Battalions of the Special
Training Regiment of Camp Penticuff, Georgia, he said, echoes
from the speakers overlapping and blurring, give a soldierly
hello to the fine ball clubs thatve come out here today to
entertain youour sister communitys Highbridge Hellbenders
of the Chattahoochee Valley League, and the Splendid
Dominican Touristers, some talented barnstormers from the
Negro American League! Let em hear you, men!
A tumult of claps and gospel shouts. The lieutenant
broke into it to read lineups, ours first, and each Hellbender
player trotted out to line up between second and third base.
Oddly enough, the GIs of the Special Training Regiment made
as much racket for us as our own fans in Highbridge wouldve.
Then the lieutenant read the starters for Mr Bissonettes
glorified pickup squad. Batting in the lead-off spot and playing
second base, Terris Slag Iron Smith! If that ball fieldd
had a roof, those colored soldiers wouldve blown it into the
Gulf of Mexico. Slag Iron Smith couldve been every last one
of ems favorite cousin.
I recall the name of every other Dominican Tounster the
lieutenant said, each with a road alias cornier by several degrees
than any of oursRufus Pepperpot Cole, Luis Gumbo
Garcia, Hosea The Gator Partlow. Each of their guys got a
send-off Highbridge fans wouldve reserved for a regiment of
heroes. Dont think it wasnt intimidating either.
The Army appointed umpires. No big deal? Ordinarily,
maybe not, but Major Dexterd asked a Negro captain from a
Negro tanker unit to call balls and strikes, and a black NCO
from his own battalion to patrol the bases. Youdve thought,
gauging these appointments by the reactions of our biggest
in-house bigots, hed asked Attila the Hun and Vlad the Impaler
to do it. Even Mister JayMac, seeing these men on the field,
felt it incumbent upon himself to buttonhole Major Dexter
and argue for one white umpon the grounds wed made
dozens of courtly concessions to Mr Cozys boys already,
including playing them at all, meeting them in front of their
enlisted cousins, and using a CVL rest day to come out here.
Neither Mister JayMac nor Major Dexter would allow
himself the pleasure of ranting or kicking dirtbut the
argument drug on. Both teams went to their benches, and the GIs
began to get restless. They swayed on their seats and sang out
ad-lib Jody chants:
Left, right, left, right, march yo ass.
All that glitters must be brass!
Left my home in Tennessee.
Ever DI looks de same to me!
Why you fellas has to stall?
We come out to watch some ball!
Jody, Jody, see me sweat.
My po body got a liquid debt!
Count yo fingers, count yo toes.
Be a year fo one team scohs!
During these chants, the Dominicans retook the field, but
without a ball. They pretended to have one, though. Their
pitcherTurtlemouth Thomas Clark, a crafty s.o.b. once the
game got clockingwent into this showboaty boa-constrictor
windup and let absolutely nothing fly. A Dominican at the
plate with a bat took a swing as broad as Turtlemouths
windup and drove that whistling air ball into right for a
make-believe single.
By this time, the crowdd stopped chanting. You could
even hear the thwock! the bat made hitting the ball. (The
catcherd made it, sticking a finger into his cheek and popping
it out like a champagne cork.) Anyway, as the batter ran to
first, the right fielder scooped up the ghost liner on two
invisible hops and fired absolutely nothing to the shortstop
covering second. This man looked the runner back to first, walked
the nothing in his hands a few steps towards the mound, and
flipped it to old Turtlemouth.
Hellre they doing? Fadeaway said, not trusting his eyes.
Shadow ball, Dunnagin told him. Watch.
The next batter took a couple of pitches, on both of
which Turtlemouth wound himself tighter than the rubber
band on a model airplanes propeller. The batter banged his
third pitchthwock!an air-ball knuckler, to the shortstop,
Pepperpot Cole. Cole flung himself down, trapped absolutely
nothing under his scrap of a glove, retrieved it, and zipped it to
the second baseman, Slag Iron Smith, who caught this nothing
at belt height. The runner from first tried to take Smith out of
the play, but Slag Iron pivoted, leapt like a deer, and threw
absolutely nothing to first.
A peg in the dirt. The first baseman yanked it out of the
dust like a man cracking a whip, and spun around to call
the batter out as the runner somersaulted over the bag. Then
the first baseman started the ghost ball around the horn in
honor of the phantom double play.
The GIs loved it. Youdve figured them at a county-fair
strip show, they whooped so shrill and sassy.
Hard to make that kinda stuff look real, Dunnagin
said. Youve got to have your timing down.
Mister JayMac finally got the Negro captain assigned to
home plate moved to the base paths, along with the black DI
from the First Battalion of the Special Training Unit. The
major himself went behind the plate. That way, the foul lines
had an ump each. If a wronged Hellbender needed to dispute a
call at the plate, he wouldnt have to test the will of a racial and
social inferior. Mister JayMac, as I heard later, had used
whitemail to get his wayhed threatened to take us
Hellbenders home.
Another problem remained. Which team qualified as visitors
and which as homies? Mister JayMac wanted the advantage
of last bats. So did Mister Cozy. They both went out to Major
Dextersweating in his chest protector, birdcage, and shin
guardsto present their cases. Mister JayMac said no team
named Dominican Touristers could be a home team, barnstormers
were visitors by definition, and Camp Penticuff lay
within hailing distance of Highbridge. Thus, the Hellbenders,
even in our away flannels, deserved home-field advantage.
Mister Cozy said this exhibition had begun in his head,
his Dominicans had reached the ball field first, and if either
team had the local crowd on its side, well . . .
Flip a coin, Mister JayMac said.
Okay by me, Mister Cozy said. Do it.
Major Dexter flipped a coin, it landed tails, and the
Splendid Dominicans took the field with last bats in their
baggy pockets and grins on their faces.
Please stand for the National Anthem, said the lieutenant
at the press-box mike. Camp Penticuffs flag pole, with the
Stars and Stripes hanging limp in the sultry afternoon, grew
out of a pile of stones on a hillock two parade grounds beyond
the left-field fence. We flapped our caps over our hearts, and a
black trumpeter with one stripe on his sleeve marched up into
the press box and blew the clearest Star-Spangled Banner Id
ever heard, a cross between high-church music and Harry James. As soon as
he hit those home of the brave notes, the
GIs started a cheer that echoed in chilling sweeps to the
barracks, the PX, the main gate.
I dug into the batters box while this unnerving roar went
on. Turtlemouth Clark looked past me for his catchers sign
like I wasnt there. My Red Stix bat caught some libel from the
crowdHey, you gon hit with a Tootsie Pop stick? Boy
from Californy, got him a bitty redwood bat.but Mister
Cozys boys didnt blink. I couldve walked up there with a blue
shillelagh without goading them to curl a lip. No more shadow
ball, the life-or-death horsehide only.
Turtlemouth Clark wound upexcept now, he hardly
had a windup at all, just a quick pat-a-cake at his chest with
glove and ball. Out of this business, he attacked me with
sidearm smoke. His pitch had me looking for a doorway in the
clay, to escape having a Fearless Fosdick hole drilled through
me. I leapt at least four feet backwards.
Steeeeeee-rike! Major Dexter cried.
The Special Training soldiers laughed a load of wrinkles
into their khakis. But I deserved it. I reset myself with a throb
in my head and crushed chili peppers in my cheeks.
Mebbe youll see the nex one, the catcher said.
Before Turtlemouth could go into his stingy game
windup, I called time and walked aside.
Batter up, Major Dexter said. Now!
I stepped back in. Turtlemouth struck me out, but put a
couple of Band-Aids on my stigma by also whiffing Charlie
Snow and Lon Musselwhiteto the noisy delight of the
troops. Snow made him unleash seven pitches before chasing a
sidearm change, but Muscles, like me, took three wild cuts at
three stuttering speedballs and slunk back to the dugout mumbling
about the legality of Turtlemouths delivery.
When Darius took the mound for us, a murmur spiced
with a few profanities lapped the stands. If Darius heard, he
made no sign, just cycled through his warm-up tosses to Dunnagin,
then stepped back to let us infielders throw the ball
around. Once in the field, Darius didnt give a cucumber pip
what color his opponents were; he wanted them out, the
scairter the better, his whole devotion to the uniform on his
back. In this case, our dingy Hellbender ash-browns.
In the bottom of the first, Darius matched Turtlemouths
strikeout feat, and we had us a pitched battleliterallyof
Ks and Os, connipted hitters tossing away their bats after
fruitless trips to the box.
Oh, a couple of fellas hit the ball. Charlie Snow tagged
one on a pearl-bright clothesline right to the center fielder, and
Henry cracked a pop-up that Turtlemouth himself, waving
everybody else off, caught at shoe-top height from a ridiculous
outhouse squat, a basket catch two inches from the ground.
The crowd gobbled up this showboating like peanuts.
In the top of the fourth, I drew a walkthe first hitter
on either team to reach base. It seemed near lunatic, but I
wondered if Turtlemouth had put me on on purpose, just to
wake the crowd. The four balls hed shown me had all
thwapped in too high to hit, too high even to lunge for.
Buck Hoey, in his boot-blackened bedroom slippers, left
his coaching box to talk to me.
Whatd you do to deserve a free pass? Promise to suck
him off after the game?
Up yours, I said as plainly as I could.
Think you can steal on the shine, Dumbo? We need a
runner in scoring position.
Sure I did. I always thought so.
Play ball, said the colored officer umpiring first.
Hoey ignored him. Try to draw a throw. See what kind
of move to first hes got. Then watch for a pitchout. Waxahachie
Beckland has the second best slingshot on this club.
Waxahachie Beckland was the catcher, Turtlemouths battery
mate. Hoey wanted me to measure my lead against both
men and mind my ps and qs. He sashayed back into his
coaching box.
I drew one throw from Turtlemouth. He had only a so-so
pickoff move. (Or he showed me only a so-so pickoff move.) I
got back to first a full second ahead of his toss. On his first
throw to the plate, though, Turtlemouth pitched out to Beckland.
If Id broken for second, Beckland wouldve gunned me
down by a yard or more.
Way to go, Dumbo, Hoey said. Watch em again.
I felt pretty smug about drawing a throw from
Turtlemouth and then hoodwinking him and his catcher into
pitching out to Snow. They expected me to steal. Mister Cozy
and his boys had done their homework; they knew I could
outrun the word God, they respected my foot speed. I lengthened
my lead, feinting once or twice with my upper body.
Turtlemouth showed me the whites of his eyes, but didnt
tumble to my feints. He threw to the plate again, another
pitchout. I strolled back to first and kicked the bag. The Dominican
battery mates looked like fools. Theyd risked two
straight pitchouts, for nothing. Even worse, from their point of
view, theyd run the count on Charlie Snow, the best hitter in
the CVL, to two and zero. Only a madman deliberately put
himself in the hole with Snow at bat and me on base.
As I took my fourth lead of this at bat, Hoey caught my
eye. Behind his hand, he mouthed, Co. He also cradled his left
elbow, our sign to steal. Turtlemouth, he obviously figured, had
to throw Snow a strike to keep from moving within a ball of
walking him. He and Beckland wouldnt dare pitch out again.
So, of course, they did.
I had a decent jump on Turtlemouth and second base
looked stepping-stone close. Before I could belly-slide into it,
though, Slag Iron Smith leapt in front of me, caught Becklands
stinger from home, and let me tag myself out coming
head-first into his floppy cold cut of a glove.
Three straight pitchouts. Stupid. Except the strategyd
nailed me dead. On the other hand, Charlie Snow, too surprised
to try to queer Becklands throw by swinging at the last
one, now had three balls on him. Maybe the Dominicans ruse
hadnt workednot, at least, as slick as theydve liked.
Forget that. Cool as ice, Turtlemouth worked the count
to three balls and two strikes, then erased Snow on a nibbler
back to the mound. He humiliated Muscles with another
strikeout and slouched off the field to a standing O.
In the bottom of the sixth, Darius gave up
the first two hits of the Camp Penticuff exhibition, back-to-back
singles to Gator Partlow and Waxahachie Beckland. Nobody
out. Partlow at third, Beckland at first.
Push done come to shove, eh? Fadeaway shouted from
the bench. Time to make sure us crackers dont win our
money.
Mister JayMac went over to Fadeaway and spoke to him.
Made it look good as you could for as long as you
could, I guess! Fadeaway shouted around the boss.
Mister JayMac got right in front of Fadeaway and quietly
chewed the kid from Sea Island to Pensacola. Fadeaway shut
up, and Mister JayMac sat back down again.
Darius struck out the third Dominican batter. The
fourth hit a grounder to Junior, who snapped it to me for the
force at second. I dragged my foot over the bag and threw to
Henry at first. We got the runner there by half a step, and the
double play wiped out the run that wouldve scored from third
if my throw had hit Henrys mitt a fraction of a second later.
On his way in to the bench, Darius collected the game
ball from Henry and ambled straight to Fadeaway. Mister
JayMac hurried to interpose himself, but Darius stepped
around him and slapped the ball into Fadeaways chest.
You thow, boy. Save yo precious wager.
Darius, Ill pull you when its time, Mister JayMac said.
Im sittin, Darius said. I jes guv yall six of the best I
got. Let this eggsuck boy carry yall from here.
Neither of you has a thing to say about it, Mister
JayMac said. Darius, you pitch.
Nosir. Im gone.
Major Dexter waddled over in his umpires gear. They
need that ball for warm-ups. Toss it back out, please.
Fadeaway tossed the ball to Turtlemouth Clark. Then he
sat back down, his eyes on the clayey dust between his shoes.
Mister JayMac grabbed Dariuss shirt. This club belongs
to meyou pitch because I say you do, nigger! Despite
the crowd noise, everyone on our bench heard this. Mister
JayMac heard it himself and looked around.
So much belongs to you, Darius said distinctly.
Im sorry, Mister JayMac said. Youve held these fellas
in check the whole way. Keep on doing it.
Nosir. I brung yall fars I can. Darius stripped to his
ribbed gray undershirt and dropped his Hellbenders blouse
into Fadeaways lap. Fadeaway pushed it into the dirt, like he
wouldve a grungy dishrag.
Damn it, Mister JayMac whispered to himself.
Darius walked through a gate and between a pair of
bleacher sections towards the Brown Bomber. The soldiers in
the stands watched him go with the same sledgehammered
curiosity felt by us Hellbenders. Some of the GIs hollered,
Way to sling that baby! or Hallelujah! Darius raised one
arm and held it over his head until hed disappeared from view.
Batter up! Major Dexter yelled. We need a batter!
In the top of the seventh, Henry jacked Turtlemouths first pitch so
far over the right-field fence that everyoneeveryonestood
up to watch it arc off into infinity.
Ooooiiiuuuweeoo! went Lamar Knowles. Never seen nobody
but Jumbo pole em like that!
His amazed jubilation didnt extend to the troops. They
admired the crunch of Henrys home run, but not Turtlemouth
blowing his shutout or yielding a crucial run this late
in the game. In any case, Turtlemouth wiped his forehead and
mowed downlike a man with a Catling gunReese Curriden,
Junior Heggie, and Double Dunnagin.
In the bottom of the inning, Fadeaway swaggered out to
pitch. A few disgruntled GIs shot him the razz. They sensed
he might have rabbit ears and got on him like cats on a camel
cricket: Fade away, Fadeaway! Oh, fade away, please today, oh,
faded ofay, Fadeaway! And so on. Fadeaway adjusted. He left
off strutting and buckled down. In his first inning of work, he
allowed one solid single but emerged unscored-on and quietly
cocky. Itd taken me six innings to get the strut hed picked up
facing only four Dominican hitters.
In the top of the eighth, Skinny Dobbs, Fadeaway
Ankers, and I came up against TurtlemouthSkinny and I for
only the third time, Fadeaway for his first. Skinny and
Fadeaway lined and struck out respectively, and Henry stopped me
as I started up to the plate.
I know what you should do, he said.
Yeah. H-h-hit it where they aint.
He took me by the shoulders, gently. Bunt.
B-b-bunt?
Push it down the third-base line, Daniel. Mr Clark has
a weakness fielding bunts.
H-h-how do you kn-know?
Mr Clark has an inner-ear problem. I read it in a Negro
paper from Birmingham.
Inner-ear problem?
If you push the ball down the line, Mr Clark will lose
his balance trying to retrieve it. With your speed, Daniel, youll
have a hit.
I had no quarrel with Henrys suggestion. In my two at
bats, Id fanned and reached base on a strategic charity ticket.
This time, then, I squared around, into the blazing sweep of
Turtlemouths sidearm curve, and, yielding with the pitch, let
the ball plunk off my bat and sprinted.
To improve your chances of legging out a doubtful hit,
you lower your head and dig. As Satchel Paige said, you dont
look back; either somebody might be gaining on you or youve
stolen a second or two from your ultimate time. God save my
soul, but I peeked to see how Turtlemouthd attacked my bunt.
When I did, I saw him grab for the ball, wheel around his
outstretched arm like a besotted maypole dancer, and topple
into the dirt. He underhanded a throw to first as he fell, but
the ballby now I was digging again, burning jet fuelsailed
on him, and his wild throw got me all the way to second.
Turtlemouth, walking back to the mound, paused to
consider me on second. He sneezed and rubbed his nose. Done
got there so fast you guv me pneumonia. He got back into his
stance and toed the rubber from a stretch.
Snow brought me home with a double to the right-field
gap, making the score two to nothing. Muscles stranded Snow
with a wing-shot gull to the left fielder, and the rest of us
trotted back out to defend our lead against the cream of Mister
Cozys batting order. The afternoons fractured dazzle hung
on us like warm honey, golden and clingy.
Despite the sunshine, and the peanut
scorch drifting over us from town, the rest of that game played
out like a wine drunksome kind of drunk, with the
slide-show lurchiness of a bad dream. At shortstop, I watched it all
happen, my mouth full of worry flannel.
In the bottom of the eighth, the first bat showed up. I
dont mean baseball bat either. I mean living bat, a flying
varmint with tattered wings. Against the rinsed blue of the sky, it
seemed so humdrum, as it dive-bombed the field and swerved
up from a thousand near collisions, that most of us mistook it
for a birdif we mistook it for anything other than a scudding
magnolia leaf. Then more such wheeling varmints swept into
view, and I wondered if a pigeon breeder on the roof of a
nearby barracks had emptied his dovecotes. But the varmints
got thicker and noisier, breaking into squadrons and chirping
like airborne crickets, and I knew them for bats, several pesky
flights of them. They stirred more breeze than the day did,
zooming from the stands to the outfield, and from the fences
to the stands, pip-pip-pipping so damned tinnily I started
thinking of them as . . . as pip-squeaks.
In the black half of the eighth, the Dominicans sent up
first baseman Gumbo Garcia, center fielder Tommy Christmas,
and right fielder Gator Partlow. Fadeaway walked Garcia. The
bats blew back and forth overhead like curls of newspaper char
from summers own chimney. Fadeaway punched Christmas a
ticket to first, just like he had Garcia.
Major Dexters GIs began to sway and foot-stamp.
Fadeaway struck out Partlow on a slider-slider-speedball
setup, and Dunnagin jumped out from behind his third swing
and snapped off a bullet to Henry that nailed Tommy Christmas
two feet off the bag. Christmas died on his knees, ducking
all the stooping bats a-twitter over the field.
The GIs went as dead as a knobbed-off radio station.
Now the Dominicans had two outs and only the melon-footed
and heavy-ribbed Garcia still on second. Fadeaway
walked third baseman Judd Davies.
Buckle down! Mister JayMac shouted, really hacked.
Fadeaway mayve tried, but on his first pitch to Oscar
Wall, the left fielder, Wall reached back, his front leg off the
ground, and clobbered Fadeaways best scroogie an Alabama
ton. He almost seemed to hit it one-handedhis left hand
swept away from the bat handle on his follow-through, while
the ball itself hurtled up and away, into a cloud of dive-bombing bats.
I could imagine Fadeaway praying, Dear God, let it hit
one of them varmints. I prayed too. Only a lucky midair
intercept would prevent Walls blast from carrying to the fence
and tying us at two apiece. And if it cleared the fence, the
Dominicans would likely beat us.
The ball didnt de-head one damned bat. It flew through
them, towards Charlie Snow, on a hard, low arc. They veered
away from it like theydve dodged any other flying predator, by
sonar and stunt-flying. Snow ran under the ever-shifting cloud
with his back to the ball, the way DiMaggio and later Mays
did, thinking to turn at the last instant and pincer-snatch it.
But the bats broke his concentration. He looked back for
the drive too soon and had to dig out again at a hard lope.
Everyone could see hed locked into a collision course with the
fence. As the ball dropped, Snow sensed the fence coming. He
tried to save his body and make the catch at the same time.
He hurtled, a leg-high effort to hit the fences cap rail
with the edge of his shoe, grab the ball at belt height behind
him, and spring to the grass with his bones unbroken and
Darius and Fadeaways shutout intact. But his spikes, or the
fence, or a crazy skew on Walls plummeting drive did him in.
A spike snagged. He didnt bounce off the fence but somersaulted
over it, the ball going with him. When he didnt get up
right away, something scary uncurled in my gut.
Thass a home run, one of the colored umps said. He
made the catch all right, but his feet never come down fair.
Garcia, Davies, and Wall all went round the bases. That
made the score three to two, the Dominicans way. Major
Dexter signaled as much.
I began running towards center. So did a bunch of others.
Snow still hadnt untangled from the heap hed made beyond
the fence, and both Muscles and Skinny, our other two out-fielders,
clambered over it to see about him. From my lungs to my
guts, I had a splintery ache, big as a two-by-four. Beside the
chain link in center, I knelt with it, a sinner behind a grid, to
ask Muscles how it fared with the beautiful Charlie Snow.
S bad. Muscles had grit in his voice, the first rubbings
from a square of sandpaper. S real bad.
Throw it in, Snow said from Shangri-La, somewhere
out of this atmosphere. Hold the sucker to three.
Just you hush, Muscles told him. S too late for that.
Yeah, said Snow sweetly. I know. Heaped there, he
hemorrhaged. The wound at his ankle bled like gangbusters.
Muscles tried to tourniquet it with his shirt, which seeped
through crimson-brown and reeked of sweat and redness in a
combo I never want to smell again. The bats peeled off towards
their attics. Sod their shadows, moving us out from under an
afghan of shifting dapples into a cruel flat burn of sunlight.
SomeoneMister JayMac? Major Dexter?called for a
medic and an ambulance. Gawkers of every stripe and hue
appeared.
Jesus Lord, hes bleeding to death! Muscles shouted.
Hang on, Ch-Charlie, I told Snow through the fence.
No ambulance arrived, but the camps CO, General
Gordon Holway, pulled up in a command car with the words
THE OLD MAN stenciled on his door over a five-pointed
white star. General Holway vaulted out and hustled over to the
bleeding Snow.
Go there, do this, call for that, he barked to soldiers and
ballplayers alike, and the way guys hurried to do what he said
made me feel a little better. By this time, Mister JayMacd
reached Snow too. He stood beside me, his throat pulsing
above me like a turkey gobblers wattles.
Hemophiliac! he said. Yallve got to do something for
him damned quick.
What? General Holway squinted up at Mister JayMac
out of eyes as narrow and blue as trout gills.
Hes a bleeder, Mister JayMac said. A mildly afflicted
bleeder, but a bleeder. His blood dont clot like it ought.
General Holway stood up. A bleeder? And he plays ball?
You let him?
I have to, Snow said through papery lips. Aint nothing
for me but to play.
Henry came up to me and did a side-saddle leap over the
fence. He gathered the damaged Charlie Snow into his arms.
Hospital? Infirmary? Where may we take him?
S dangerous to do it that way, somebody said. The
poor bloke needs a litter and a couple of corpsmen.
Its dangerous to let him lie, Henry said.
Put him in my car, General Holway said. Lets move
it!
General Holway, his chauffeur, and Henry all got into
the command car, Henry in the back with Snow propped like a
smashed doll in the crook of his arm. Off they bounded
towards the administrative and services area, a complex of
two-story wooden buildings spaced out in rectangles, every building
and every street block a twin of all the others.
The chauffeur played the command cars Klaxon, sounding
its raucous bleat every thirty yards or so. The rest of us
stood back and watchedHellbenders, Splendid Dominicans,
and some of the GIs in Major Dexters Special Training units,
a poleaxed crew of gawkers.
Major Dexter approached Mister JayMac. Your fellas
have one more out to get and at least one more trip into town,
sir.
Games over, Mister JayMac said.
Why? Fadeaway Ankers puled, dragging the word out.
You put me in to finish this thang, didnt you?
Youve jes finished.
Then Mister Cozys team wins, Major Dexter said.
Five full innings are a legal game. This ones nearly gone
eight.
This game warnt legal to begin with, Fadeaway said.
We had to sneak out here jes to start it.
Mister JayMac said, Hush, boy-o, like a groom gentling
a high-strung horse. Then, in the crush of bodies by the fence,
he found Mr Cozy Bissonette and stuck out his hand to him.
A hard-fought game, sir. Your men have skill and moxie.
Please tell Mr Clark and Mr Wall, in particular, how much
their play impressed us.
Predate that, Mister Cozy said. Yo center fielder gon
come round n play for yall again real soon.
Hes most likely going to die, Mister JayMac said.
Mister Cozy dropped his gaze. Then God rest his soul,
and God bless yall for letting us play with sech a man.
Out there at the fence, us Hellbenders shook hands with
Splendid Dominican Touristers, and vice versa. Fadeaway and a
few others didnt like it much, but the disrespect finishing out
wouldve showed Charlie Snow was plain even to them and so
they finally shut up.
The Dominicans took their win with gravity. One of
emTommy Christmas, I thinksaid to me, You mighta got
us, one mo inning. You sholy might, and strolled back to the
stands with Partlow and Davies, marveling at the grit of
Snows effort to chase down through a canopy of bats Oscar
Walls tremendous knock to center.
When it was announced over the PA system the Dominicansd
won, the troops whooped and jitterbugged in the
bleachers. I didnt fault em. In the lingo of deeds, their
champions had proclaimed their honor.
Mister JayMac wanted Darius to drive us
to the infirmary, but he was nowhere to be found. So Major
Dexter, whod finally shed his umpires gear, offered to drive us
around the field and through the T-square grids of the camps
Quartermasters 700-series buildings to the infirmary.
I cant leave Darius out here, Mister JayMac told Major
Dexter. Yall wouldnt enlist him, would you?
This is a training camp, not a recruitment station.
I know what it is, Major. I asked if somebody out hered
accept his papers and put him in uniform.
Not if you dont want us to, Mr McKissic.
Well I dont.
Then youve nothing to worry about, sir.
If yall find him out here later, will you truss him up and
hold him till I can fetch him home?
Yessir.
Well youd better.
Major Dexter climbed aboard the Brown Bomber and
took us on a quick rickety jaunt to the infirmary.
The infirmary looked like every other bleached crackerbox
structure at the camp, except it had a concrete loading
dock for ambulances and supply trucks. It roosted across the
road from an asphalt lot next to the Quartermaster Depot.
When we arrived, Henry stood under the docks shake-shingled
awning staring across the road at ten columns of ten men
each standing in that lot in rubber sheathssacks, I guessas
smooth as lambs skin but as black as auto tires.
An NCO in a wide-brimmed hat stood in front of this
whacko detail (buckra and buffalo together, whites and blacks,
but more paleskins than coloreds) shouting, Hop it, gentlemen,
hop it! so the bodies in those sacks pogoed with a floppy
sighing soundlike the painful inflation of a hundred huge
balloons with a hundred wheezing bicycle pumps. I beheld this
show in rubbernecking disbelief.
General Holways command car had apparently come and
gone, and when the Bomber pulled into the ambulance dock,
Henry paid us no heed. He kept staring across the road, at the
encondomed GIs hopping there like big vulcanized fleas. Or
maybe he was staring beyond them, to the ball field where
Charlie Snowd leapt, snarled his spikes, and crumpled headlong.
In fact, Henry didnt give a cold hoot about the jumpingjacks
across K Street. Mister JayMac rushed past Henry
into the infirmary to see about his center fielder.
Muscles asked Major Dexter, What in Uncle Sams
armys going on over therea punishment detail?
Nosir, theyre volunteers.
For what, sunstroke?
Nosir, a Quartermaster experiment to test the resistance
of GI clothing to the natural corrosives in human sweat. Our
men in Alaska, the Pacific, North Africa, even here at home,
need reliable clothes, and our scientists need reliable data.
Lord God, Muscles said, theyll fall out in this heat.
Theyll fall out only when theyve received the order to
fall out, Major Dexter said.
I meant theyll faint. Muscles replied. They
wont need an order to do it. No wonder yallve stuck em across
from the infirmarysave you a few steps.
Mr Musselwhite, theyre wearing shorts in those sacks,
just their skivvies, not full battle dress.
I dont follow this, Major, not atall.
Were collecting sweat. The sweat that pools in those
sacks we gather into vials. Later, we apply itthe sweat, I
meanto the various fabrics proposed for use in GI clothing.
The Quartermaster Corps scientists measure its effects on the
fabrics in question.
I wondered what the hell Mister JayMacd found out
about Snow, and just then he came out of the infirmary with a
major in a white coat. Mister JayMac and the major spoke to
Henry on the emergency platform. After theyd talked, Mister
JayMac slumped against the wall and put his face in his hands.
Henry came to the bus. He put his hands on the Bombers
roof, just above the door, and arched his body over the gap
between the bus and the concrete platform.
When Major Dexter levered open the buss door, Henry
spoke so we all could hear. Mr Snow has just passed.
(Passed.) Then Henry sort of hung there, bridging the Bomber
to the squat ashen building in which our dead teammate lay.
Charlie Snow, R.I.P.
It wouldve pissed him off tove quit with a whole inning
left to go, Turkey Sloan said.
Anyone here who thinks they know exactly how Charlie
Snow felt and thought doesnt know the first thing, Muscles
said. Anyway, we have to do what our own consciences say,
not what we think the dead would have us do.
Spose they overlap? Buck Hoey said.
Henry shoved himself away from the bus, strode across
the dock to Mister JayMac, and led him into the infirmary,
into the cheapjack corridors of Snows last passage. I began to
cry. Across the road, the NCO directing the volunteer jumping
jacks in their rubber sacks shouted, . . . two, three, halt! All
the paid perspirers stopped on cue; four or five of em dropped
to the asphalt from fatigue or fever.
Rise from your knees and hoist your sack along with
you! the NCO shouted. Dont spill a drop!
The sergeants voice rang in me the way my mothers or
FDRs or Jimmy Durantes wouldI recognized it. It had the
familiarity of a sadistic high school teachers. The sergeant
pulled his hat off, wiped his neck and forehead, and pivoted
towards the Bomber with a hot, curious face, amazed that till
now he hadnt even noticed our bus.
I recognized the topkick. Id seen himbrieflyin an
upstairs cubicle of The Wing & Thigh on Penticuff Strip, the
startled mug of a guy caught out on secret holiday. Id seen
that face somewhere else toonamely, aboard the train thatd
brought me from Tenkiller to Highbridge. The face belonged
to my ravager in the Pullman car lavatory, Sergeant Pumphrey.
I got on my knees on my seat and stuck my head through the
window facing the parking lot.
You filthy bugger! I cried. You filthy damn bugger!
No stammer, just outrage.
For mercys sake, Boles, mind your manners, Curriden
said. Were guests out here.
You thief! I shouted. You p-p-pervert!
A hundred dripping men in a hundred rubber sacks
looked from Pumphrey to the Brown Bomber and back again.
Pumphrey, DI hat in hand, gaped at me hanging out my window,
nothing in his flat muddy eyes but bewilderment and a
dull lack of awareness. He just didnt know me, either from the
train or from The Wing & Thigh.
P-P-Pumphrey, you sh-sh-shitass, you owe me f-f-f-fifty
b-bucks! I shouted at him. You owe me . . . Because I
didnt know how to figure the finer, or cruder, points of his
debt, I couldnt say what he owed. I finished, Pumphrey, you
owe me!
Pumphrey put his hat back on and adjusted its chin strap.
He pointed a finger at me. Go easy, kiddo. Wrought up that
way, you run a real ugly mouth.
But Id abandoned the window. I hurried up the
Bombers aisle and out its open door. No one had the sense or
the speed to stop me. I rounded the buss front end and trotted
across K Street to get in Sergeant Pumphreys face. Hed
magically conjured, or freed from a canvas belt, a weapona
billy or a swagger stickand as I approached him, I eyed that
stick as a part of Pumphrey needing amputation.
Fifty dollars! I screeched. Fifty dollars and my voice
back!
Your voice back? Pumphrey spread his arms, crouched,
and waggled his swagger stick. I had the feeling everybody near
enough to see me had begun to think me utterly deranged.
You stole my voice, I ranted. You poked it down so f-far I
cant find it. Give me back my voice! I feinted this way and
that, and Pumphrey moved in agitated reaction to my feints, his
baton swinging like a hand-held mine detector.
This kids nutso, Pumphrey told his troops. Totally
nutso.
I liked him thinking so. I rushed him, grabbed his baton
barrel, and yanked. Pumphrey clung hard to the stick, but my
tugging laid him out in a full belly sprawl, one arm towards me
as his last prideful link to the baton.
I skipped backwards. With each skip, Id kick Pumphrey
in the chin with the toe of my baseball shoe. A few GIs gasped,
but most whistled and whooped. My voice, yallre my
v-voice! I yelled. I dragged Pumphrey towards me, I shook
him like a dog with a fetch stick clamped in its jaws.
The sweat gatherers cheered. Every time Pumphrey got a
hand or a knee under him with a mind to reclaiming his feet, I
stretched him out with another savage jerk, and the sweaty GIs
shouted like one happy person. If my well-timed jerks didnt
keep him down, Id jump in and kick him in the throat. The
troops cheered these kicks even more loudly than they did my
stick-twisting and towing.
All of thisd happened so fast the Hellbenders hadnt had
a chance to drag me off. But now Curriden cried, Boles, youre
gonna get every last one of us tossed in the stockade! He was
out of the bus, maybe ten feet behind mewith another five
or six players behind him for emotional bracing. Jeez, kid, stop
it!
But the dogfacesd shifted into root-for-the-upstart
mode, whistling shrilly and grunting. I dodged my teammates
and dragged Pumphrey in elbow-scraping zigzags. He flinched
his head from side to side to escape my baby kicks. I spat at
him, hawking up bile from somewhere deep. He was my prom
partner, this decorated s.o.b. with the chevrons on his sleeves,
and I could have danced all afternoon with him. Pumphrey
stopped me, though. He let go.
I scuttled backwards a few steps and crashed down on my
butt. The sweat collectors gasped, then guffawed. Such fickle
fans. Such readiness to turn. I had the swagger stick, but Pumphrey
leapt forward and flung the heel of his fist into my
mouth. Hoey, of all people, scrambled between Pumphrey and
me, and Curriden saved my skull by grabbing my arm and
slinging me behind him like a sack of onions. The other Hellbenders
passed me along from one to the other until a good
fifteen yards and four or five teammates separated me from the
bloodied Pumphrey.
The boy has a canary circus in his head, Pumphrey
said. He wants his kidneys pulled out through his dick.
You took my voice! I told Pumphrey from behind
Dunnagin.
What does that mean? Listen at you, punk. Youre
loudern a cannon crump and you say I took your voice.
My voice and f-fifty goddamn bucks.
Hes fetched. One daft sumbitch.
No Im not, I said. Im Popeye the Sailor Man. Im
strong to the finish, cause I eat my spinach. Im P-P-Popeye the
Sailor Man.
Toot-toot, said Turkey Sloan.
Pumphrey looked dazed, sledgehamrnered almost.
Tenkiller, I said. Tenkiller! I swung from Dunnagin to
Nutter to Muscles to Curriden, the better to see Pumphreys
face, the face from the train, the face from the cathouse. The
muscles in his face worked from anger to emptiness to puffy
chagrin. If you dont have my money, I said, take back what
you said about my f-f-father.
Pumphrey back-pedaled. The boys fevered. Get him to
a medic, nodding at the infirmary, fore somebody hotter-headed
than me grabs up a .45 and plugs him.
Ill shoot you first! I yelled at Pumphrey, pointing my
index finger and cocking my thumb. Bang!
The dogfaces hopped into a kind of formation while my
pals nudged me away from another face-off with Pumphrey,
working me around the Bombers nose and back inside. They
pushed me down in a seat on the infirmary side. Curriden
wedged in next to me, forcing me into a scrunch over the tire
well.
Were damned lucky the MPs didnt show up and run us
all in as goldbricking troublemakers, he said.
Miserable pricks, I said.
What in hell got into you? The logjam break? You
talked damned near as much as Kaltenborn.
Henry and Mister JayMac came out of the infirmary and
reboarded the Bomber. Mister JayMac faced us from the head
of the aisle, while across K Street a hundred human sausages,
black sack after black sack, hippity-hopped off the oiled lot
and up a wooden ramp into the Quartermaster Depot.
Mister JayMac took off his jacket, showing us a dress
shirt blotched with heat sweat, grief sweat, and what-all.
Charlie Snow died in there. He didnt want to, no more
than you or I would, but he played every day knowing it could
happen and taking as much care as he could not to let it. His
luckusually he had Gods own guardian-angelic gracewell,
his luck took the day off. It decamped with Darius. Weve lost
Mr Snow, and the squeeze in my guts tells me Darius has also
cut his ties to us. It suggests to me, gentlemen, that
Darius aint dead, is he? Trapdoor Evans said.
No, Mister JayMac said. Hes jes absconded, high-tailed
it who knows where.
Then he could come back, Evans said. Charlie wont.
He aint got the option. So I dont know whyn hell you got to
cry over Darius atall. Its Charlie that died, sir, it uz Charlie
taking us to another CVL pennant.
True enough, Mister JayMac said. Then he said, Endicott
Mortuary in Highbridge will pick up Mr Snows body
later today and prepare it for burial at noon Thursday, five
hours before the second game of our Quitman homestand. Mr
Musselwhite will move to center. Mr Evans, you will start in
left until such time as I determine you need spelling or outright
replacement. I expect everybody aboard this bus, not
counting Major Dexter, to be at both the funeral and the
interment. Henry will drive us home. Complete silence, please,
till we get there.
Quitmans Mockingbirds hit Highbridge
for a three-game series, one game an evening from Wednesday
through Friday. The day after Darius left, the day after we lost
to Mister Cozys gang, the day after Charlie Snow died out to
Camp Penticuff, the Mockingbirds flew in our faces for nine
straight innings. Hit after merciless hit. Slash-and-burn base
running that bled our will and gave our fed-up fans so many
chances to catcall that fatigue set in. Eventually, any stray
breeze creaking through the bleachers made more noise than
our fans.
In fact, in the middle of the seventh, when Milt Frye
asked for yore prayers in memory of the brilliant Charlie
Snow, the stadium went stone dead. None of our fansd
known until then hed died; their earlier calls to put him into
the game, given Trapdoors play, had made perfect sense. Now
a silence like surrender took hold. Wed fallen several runs
behind, our star player had mysteriously passed on, and a
mood of such cobalt blueness had hit our dugout we all felt
sick to heart.
Our loss to the Mockingbirds, we learned the next morning,
had dropped us three games behind the LaGrange Gendarmes,
whod beaten Marble Springs on the road. The
Gendarmes would roll into town on Saturday for a
double-header, and a singleton on Sunday afternoon. If we lost
another game or two to losers like the patched-together Birds,
the Gendarmes might haul down 1943s CVL pennant before
we could gear back up to stop em.
On Thursday, every Hellbender on the roster attended
Charlie Snows funeral at the Alligator Park Methodist Church.
Local fans overran the lawn. Most couldnt get inside because
pews were reserved for team members, their families, and a
perfumed army of Snows female cousins, whod just arrived
from Richland, Georgia, his hometown. Even a few Mockingbirds,
admirers of Snows style, showed up, and Mister JayMac,
whod put together and was maybe even paying for Snows
obsequies, showed these Birds to some ladder-back chairs
behind the main body of pews.
Besides the big female cousins (blonde middle-aged
women in veils and pastel print dresses), the only other relative
there to mourn Charlie Snow was his wife, Vera Jo, an
ex-cocktail waitress hed married in Cheyenne, Wyoming, in
1931. They had no kids. After the service, I heard the weeping
Vera Jo tell Miss Giselle, whod snugged Vera Jo up next to her
for the walk to the cemetery, that Charlied refused to let her
have a baby for fear itd come a hemophiliac boy. Bleeders, hed
felt, had too briary a path to walk in this life; he couldnt see
helping to bring another one into it.
I ast him, Charlie, would you trade all youve got in the
way of love and talent for everlasting nothingness? But he said,
Im here; I have to make do. The never-was aint, and dont.
Why take the never-was and afflict it? He couldnt see no
other side. Now I wish I had me a whole troop of little
bleeders to ease the long nevermore hes gone off to.
Vera Jo wept, Miss Giselle hugged her, and the cemetery,
set about with water oaks, sycamores, and pecan trees, filled
nigh to overflowing with repiners.
Muscles, Curriden, Sosebee, Hay, Sudikoff, and Dunnagin
lowered Charlie Snows casket into the grave on harnesses
of fresh yellow rope. The preacher held his Bible over his
head and spoke a final benediction. The crowd broke up and
threaded back into the sweltering daylight beyond the
cemetery. Henry and I, whod stood poker-spined near the pecan
grove behind Snows burial plot, likewise started to leave.
Psssssst, hissed the pecan grove. Psssssst.
We turned, Henry and I. A shadow in amongst the dog-eared
green whorls of the hanging pecan branches beckoned to
us, pulling back as it did. Park gardeners had carpeted the
grove with pine straw and trenched it with banks of white
violets and well-pruned blackberry hedges, a retreat for the
sorrowful. Some anonymous sould even placed some slab
benches in there for the bereaved to perch their tails on.
Anyway, the crouched shadow in that chapel of pecan-bough
whorls beckoned to us again.
Its Darius, I told Henry in pure amaze.
We crept away from the other departing mourners
through a break in the pecan grove. Darius, wary as a fox, had
gone even deeper into it, at last turning himself at bay alongside
the scabby bole of tree not much thicker through the
trunk than he was through the chest. Beside that pecan, he
raised a hand to halt us.
Yall sit right there, he said. Pretend to rest. He
meant on a moss-grown bench. Henry and I sat down on it.
Whereve you b-been? asked.
Darius, maybe ten feet away, laid his cheek against the
scabbed bark of the pecan. He hugged it like a person. Ive
done signed on with Mister Cozy and the Splendid Dominicans,
he said. We play in Lake City tomorrow. Next summer
I could be wi the Memphis Red Sox or the KayCee Monarchs.
Playing, Mister Henrynot jes driving a bus. Playing.
Mister JayMac will find you, Henry said.
Why? Whyd he want to do that? Sides, Im gon change
my name and play a lot more spots than jes pitcher.
What about Euclid? Henry said.
The question gave Darius pause. Me too. I hadnt even
thought of Euclid, Dariuss supposed little brother, and hisd
been the first Hellbender face Id seen upon arriving in town.
Home games, Euclid acted as our bat boy, the only Negro kid
in that position in the league. He didnt go on the road with us
(not counting his stowaway trip to Cottonton) because Mister
JayMac had no control over his treatment in other cities.
Euclid had a regular presence around McKissic Field, though, and
split his time between Dariuss apartment and a trim little
house near the farmers market where his motherDariuss
mother, the onetime brown-sugar fancy woman of Mister
JayMaclived.
But Euclid had no McKissic blood in his veins. His
mama, Detta Rae Satterfield, had conceived him with an official
of the Railway Porters Union from Atlanta, a man as long
gone from Detta Rae as Dariuss daddy and not a whit more
missed. Just in her forties at Euclids making, shed planned the
child as the apple of her early dotagebut the manchilds
inbred rambunctiousness wearied her, and shed begged both
Darius and Mister JayMac to take him off, to act as stopgap
providers and sponsors. Theyd more or less agreed, with the
understanding Darius would do the biggest part of the guardian work.
Euclids got his mama, Darius said. Got Mister
JayMac and a house full of white big brothers.
Have you told him youre leaving?
Lord, Mister Henry, I havent had the chance. Hes gon
be awright, though, if he jes git told Im out there pitchin and
hitting. You see him, Mister Henry, tell him that. Let him
know I aint gone off to dodge him, Im doing it to grab my life
back from the ol McKissic yoke.
Ill tell him, Henry said. Now, though, that yoke will
rest even more heavily on him.
Hes awready got a yokehis black hidehe wont
shuck off this side of dying, Darius said.
A brown thrasher rattled about in the underbrush five or
six feet from Darius, fluffing out the flecked white vest of its
chest and tossing twigs and pine straw around.
Im deeply sorry bout Mr Snow, Darius said. He
wasnt no showboat. He had this easy stillness that spoke
straight through everbody elses jive and moonshine. Thats
why I come today. To say good-byeto Mr Snow and likewise
to yall, if I could manage it.
You m-managed, I said.
Some stuff awready packed in a bag on my closet shef,
Darius said. Mister Henry, could you fetch it out here after
yalls game tonight and set it on that bench? You could, Id
pick it up round midnight.
Is your apartment locked?
Nosir. Aint never been.
Then Ill do it, Henry said. But what impels you to
venture forth from McKissic House now?
Darius seemed surprised. Why, Mister Cozy ast me, hes
giving me a chanst at something I awways wanted a chanst at.
But you couldve taken flight long ago.
The interlocked wheels of the pecan leaves above Darius
winched his gaze upwards. He searched all that lacy green for
an answer. Then he squatted and trailed his fingers in the pine-straw
mulch lapping his shoes. The sheer worn-outness of his
hunker got to me.
Better late than no time, he finally said, peering at us up
from under. But why now? Good question, Mister Henry. I think
its cause my lifes done crept into its brittlest part, like unto
them innings when the whole thing could go either waydepending
on jes when the crucial bonecrack happen, and to
whom. I awmost waited past the snappin point. Mebbe I did.
But if I beat it now, mebbe Ill git past my brittle innings and
play on through to a stretch thatll heal me, that wont jes shake
me down to splinters and shards. Then he sounded angry and
near tearful at once: Dont give me no grief for coming so
tardy to a notice of how damn feeble and rickety Id got. Jes
dont. Im moving now, aint I? Im laying grease in my joints,
oiling up for tomorry?
Henry said, So it would appear.
Then dont yall chide me for what I caint nowise fix.
Darius, we dont, I said.
And fetch me that suitcase, hear? Theys cash money in
it, some clothes, a packet of eelskins. Eelskins?
Have no fear, Henry said. The deed is accomplished.
One other thing, Darius said. You still holding them
fifty dollars what got bet on our game out to Penticuff, Mister
Henry?
I believe I am, Henry said, surprised.
Well, I won that bet. I heard it said so over them PA
speakers round the field. Anyhow, I could use the money.
Henry took his wallet from inside his jacket.
Dont open it, Darius said. I could use it, but seeing
how that game ended, hexed by them damn bats and dimmed
by Mr Snows dying, I caint take it. Give it to Mr Snows
missus. Say its a token from a admirer.
Very well, Henry said. I will.
God bless yall. And bye.
Darius saluted and backed off. He rattled the underbrushthe
blackberry vines, the pine straw, the tiny white violetsless
noisily than the pesky brown thrasher still goofing around
in there.
Laying Charlie Snow to rest did something
kindlesome for us Hellbenders. We won that evenings
game against Quitman. We won it big, about as big as theyd
beaten us the night before. Win one for the Gipperexcept
Mister JayMac never trotted out a phony-baloney Knute
Rockne ploy like that; he simply said our whole season would
fall in ruins if we gave away any more games to outright inferiors,
namely, Quitman, Lanett, Marble Springs, and Cottonton.
After the game, back at McKissic House, Henry sent me
over to Dariuss apartment to get Dariuss suitcase. He figured
hed have a harder time than me sneaking down two flights of
stairs and over the crushed seashells in the Brown Bombers
garage to pull off our mission. This wasnt a con on his part,
just smart planning, but I still resented having to do myself
what Henryd promised Darius in the cemetery. So I snuck
with a foolish what-the-hell orneriness.
I clomped up the stairs in the garage and twisted the
knob on the door at the top of the landing. The Bomber slept
below me like a hibernating metal bear. The apartment door
creaked ajar, and I pushed my way inside. I couldnt turn on a
lamp for fear someone in McKissic House would notice, and I
hadnt had the wit to bring along a flashlight. I ran smack into
a wicker rocker, cursed like crazy, and wound up with a small
welt on my knee. I felt my way from the chair to a tomato-crate
table and from there to another door.
Id come to a bathroom, with a commode and a bowl-sized
sink with naked pipes. I waved my hand until it brushed a
string, which I pulled. A light bulb popped on, lifting sink,
toilet, and water-stained walls into the glare of old porcelain
and scabby green paint.
A pair of mahogany-colored cockroaches scuttled.
I backed out and pulled the door to. A yellow crack
showed from floor to lintel. I could navigate by the pale
seepage without much fear someone outside would spy the light
and sprint upstairs to waylay me.
The main living areawith a bed, the rocker, a metal
stool, a pair of upturned crates, and a cardboard chifforobehad
only one true closet. Dariuss suitcase lay in it on a shelf
two feet above my head. Worse, the cases handle faced the rear
wall. I dragged the stool over and climbed up on it on my
knees to reach the suitcase.
Whachu doin?
I swung around. The stools slippery seat almost
launched me to the floor. I grabbed the doorjamb and hung
on. Then I spotted Euclid. Euclid lay on the bed, propped on
one elbow in his Hellbenders uniformcapless, shoeless,
goggle-eyed. Hed scared the holy bejabbers out of me.
Whachu doin, Danny Bowes?
Cr-crimmy, Euclid.
He just stared. Why hadnt he greeted or jumped me at
the very beginning? I felt like a burglar.
For the past two evenings at the ballpark, Euclidd served
as bat boy, never once asking why Dariusd disappeared or
where hed gone. But Euclid seldom had much to say. He
racked bats, toted balls, chased down nearby fouls, and guarded
the teams equipment and medical supplies. He lurked like a
ghost at the murky edges of our sight. Hed get Technicolor
real only when Sosebee and Evans threw tizzies when they
fanned or muffed a fielding chance. Theyd lambaste Euclid for |
screwing with their equipment or just for coming between
them and a kickable canvas bag at the height of their fury.
Whatre you d-doing here, Euclid?
I ast you fuss.
Yeah, you did. I swung around on my knees toward the
closet shelf. D-Darius sent me for this. Reaching for the
suitcase, I explained whatd happened at Camp Penticuffan
away game despite the camps nearness and thus a day off for
Euclidand in the cemetery after Charlie Snows funeral. I
unwedged the suitcase and stepped off the stool. I walked to
the bed and set the case down at Euclids gamy feet.
Lemme take it him, he said.
Its heavy.
Ain so heaby. N I sho nough strawn.
Okay. If you really dont m-mind.
Euclid didnt mind. What I saw as a crushing chore, he
saw as a privilege, an adventure. He put on some grungy sneakers,
hoisted the suitcase off the bed, and led me out of the
room to the landing.
Down the steps he lurched, through the hydrangea and
azalea shrubs next to the buggy house, both hands on the
suitcases plastic handle and his feet as wide apart as those of a
man swinging an ax. Itd take him forty minutes, if not longer,
to make it to Alligator Park, but hed get there, sparing me and
Henry the trip and giving Darius the chance to tell him good-bye
in person.
Back in McKissic House, I told Henry of our good fortune.
He lay aside a copy of Reinhold Niebuhrs The Nature and
Destiny of Man and studied me like Id strangled a baby with its
own burp cloth. Hell beseech Mr Satterfield to take him
along, Daniel, and Mr Satterfield will be obliged to refuse the
boy.
Not n-n-necessarily.
I would wager a months remuneration. Henry rose on
his legs with an Oof! and a sigh. And when he comes back,
hell be angry or inconsolable.
Somebody had to go.
Henry shuffled to our open window and ducked through
it to the awningless fire stairs. He sat on the top step, a
shoulder against the wall, and stared across the silvery okra
stalks, elephant-eared squash plants, pole beans, and tomato
vines in the victory garden between McKissic House and Mister
JayMac and Miss Giselles Spanish-style bungalow. His
presence out there, bookless and mum, hurled waves of reproach
back at me through the dingy clapboardsbut I didnt
much care.
I went to bed.
Two or three hours later, I awoke to house-settling noises
and the scarflike strokings of a midsummer breeze. Somethinganxiety,
instinctmade me lift my head. Even in the dark I
could tell Henry hadnt reentered the room. The window still
gaped open. I tried to see through it to the fire stairs, but all
that swung into focus was shaggy black treetops and a milky
freckling of stars. No Henry.
Henry? I said. Henry?
Maybe hed squeezed back inside earlier and gone down
the hall to the lavatory. Not likely, though; his book stood
tented on his bed just where hed left it, I crawled to the foot
of my bed and peered out the window.
After a while, I stepped through the window in my skivvies
and stood there gazing on the litter below (empty paint
cans, a shiny old wash basin, cigarette packages, candy-bar
wrappers, a set of rusty bicycle pedals) and at the plants (sun-flowers,
morning glories, pokeweed, mimosa fronds) sprouting
from the debris or hugging the houses foundation. No Henry.
Briefly, I was tempted to climb onto the upper railing of
the fire stairs and leap out into the night like a Mexican cliff
diver. I resisted the urgeit wasnt hardand monkeyed my
way back inside for a smoke.
Henry didnt come back and didnt come back. I stubbed
out my cigarette and lay down again. Next thing I knew, dawnor
something pretty dose to ithad skinned up to my
pillow. My eyelids sprang open, and I kipped over to the
window.
Three or four steps below me, Henry sat with his head
down and his shoulders bent over his knees. I drummed the
sill. He turned his head to track my drumming. For some
reason, hed set up a turtledovish coo that shook his lips and
the cordlike wattles of his throat.
Henry, where you been all n-night?
Here. Taking the air.
A lie. A lie! Which, just then, seemed a shiftier and more
insulting concealment than the whole screwy rigmarole of the
kayak, the journal, and the Robert Walton letters. Why would
Henry lie to me?
You h-havent either, I started to say, stammering even in
my thoughts. But a long, pale, ratlike snout twisted out of
Henrys bosom and I couldnt stammer a word.
The snout belonged to a possum. Henry had a full-grown
possum in his lap. I climbed out to see it better, and
Henry leaned back to oblige me.
The possum didnt appreciate my visit. It showed me its
sharp little teeth, like a cat silently hissing. Its ears looked like
grayish black leaves that a hungry caterpillard notched, its tail
like a hard white rubber cable smudged with pencil erasures. It
had black or white whiskers bristling from its snout, even from
beside its beady black eyes. It wouldve won a beauty contest
only if the judges included several other possums, and maybe
not even then.
Possums are st-stupid, I said. Brains the size of
p-potato bugs. I took another step or two down. The possum
showed me its teeth again.
Perhaps a little larger than that, Henry said.
I waved my hand at the possum. It flinched away, its pink
ball of a nose wrinkling in anger or fear. Henry stroked its
back and made the same cooing noises Id heard from bed. His
concern for the beast irked me. I reached out and flicked it on
the nose.
Daniel!
The possum flinched and jumped from Henrys lap. It
scurried down the steps to escape me, but its short legs and the
gaps between the steps combined to send it scooting out of
control. For a second or so, I feared itd shoot out into the
dark and drop like a furry bomb into the rubbish and weedsbut
after itd bounced three or four steps, its head and forelegs
wedged between two balusters and its pink finger-claws went to
work to pull it through the gap and back onto the next step
down. From there, it waddled all the way down and off into
the cover of our victory garden.
You might have killed her, Henry said.
You lied to me. You werent s-sitting here all night. You
couldntve b-been.
I took a walk around Hellbender Pond. I met Pearl. I
brought her up here with me to enjoy the view.
P-Pearl?
The poor creature whose life you just placed in jeopardy.
She had babiespupskittenswhatever one calls the
offspring of that marsupial. You placed them all in jeopardy.
I didnt see any b-b-babies, Henry.
Still, she has five or six. They ride in her pouch. That
belly-flop may have injured or killed them. He climbed to the
window and ducked through it like King Kong squeezing
through a slit in a detergent box.
Henrys anger kept me from asking him more about his
lie. Surely it hadnt taken him all night to walk around the
pond and bring a possum up the fire stairs. But, if it had, Id
called him a liar and shown myself a scapegoating petty brute.
Later that day, before our final game with
Quitman, Mister JayMac came into the dining room. He had
Euclid with him, a scared ragamuffin in a one-armed headlock,
and he addressed us with the poor kid helpless in front of him.
With his free hand, Mister JayMac knuckled Euclids hair
. . . softly. You got the feeling, though, a sudden move from
Euclid would turn that soft touch into a hurtful grind.
Darius has been gone for almost three days, Mister
JayMac said. Have any of yall laid eyes on him since Tuesday?
I glanced down the table to where Henrv sat, a mound of
squash, collards, fried eggplant slices, and popcorn okra piled
on his dinner platter. He caught my glance and barely visibly
shook his head.
How bout Euclid there? Sosebee asked. Does that little
picaroon know anything?
Claims he doesnt, Mister JayMac said. Could be lying.
But for now Im not asking Euclid, Im asking yall.
Darius dont check in and out with us, Trapdoor Evans
said. Why should we know moren the boy?
All right, then, Mister JayMac said. From this moment
on, I regard Darius Satterfield as AWOL.
As what? Fadeaway Ankers said.
Absent without leave, Muscles said. AWOL.
As if our team were like unto the Army? Henry said
Army the way a Holy Roller would say Episcopalian.
Insofar as I require that sort of dedication, yes, Mister
JayMac said. Furthermore, it appears Darius has deserted us.
Which reminds me. Fadeaway looked at Henry.
Youve still got our bet money, Jumbo. Wed like it back.
You lost the wager. The money is no longer yours.
Well, it was never yours, Jumbo. So pass it on back to us
fellas it rightfully belonged to.
You lost the wager, Henry repeated. The money shall
go to Charlie Snows widow.
On whose authority did you decide that? Mister
JayMac said. Vera Jos being well taken care of, I can assure
you.
On whose authority? I looked at Henry again. Would he
confess wed spoken to Darius after the funeral yesterday?
Do you believe, sir, that the funds of a lost wager should
go back into the pockets of those who haughtily wagered them?
I do not, even as I deplore the impulse to gamble.
Mister JayMac looked stymied. When Euclid began to
fidget, he pulled his forearm tighter under Euclids chin, and
the boy steadied down again. How many of yall object to
giving the fifty to Mrs Snow?
Jeez, Fadeaway said. I shore aint crazy bout it.
Okay by me, Evans said sullenly.
Jerry Wayne Sosebee said, Let her have it. A widows a
widow. Bible says to care for em.
Ill give the money to her. Henry didnt specify how or
when, but nobody thought to call him on that because when
Henry gave his word, you could trust him on itwhich made
me recall, and regret again, the possum-on-the-steps business.
Mister JayMac let go of Euclid, who rubbed his neck.
Eyes out for Darius. Anybody sees him, let me know. Meanwhile,
Ive put a new lock on his apartment. Somebody, possibly
even Darius himself, visited the place last night and made
off with some of his belongings. Euclid says it wasnt him.
Anyway, yall stay out of there. Its off-limits.
Just like The Wing & Thigh, I thought.
If hes not at his mamas, Euclid can sleep on the
kitchen porch. Show him some courtesy when hes out there.
Will do, Muscles said, speaking as our captain.
LaGrange beat the Seminoles again last night, Mister
JayMac said, changing the subject. Were still three back.
Weve got to beat Quitman again to make our weekend series
against the Gendarmes profitableto rebound completely
from our deficit.
N I go? Euclid said.
Mister JayMac waved at him like he wouldve a buzzing
June bug, and Euclid banged into the kitchen. The balloon of
worry inside me deflated a little; I could breathe again. Euclid,
pressed hard enough, mightve spilled the news of my midnight
visit to the buggy-house apartment.
Any yall looked at our schedule beyond this weekend?
Mister JayMac asked.
We play LaGrange again next week, Muscles said.
Two games away before we hit Cottonton for three more.
If we lose to the Birds tonight and play like slew-foots
against the Gendarmes, we could be eight or nine games out of
first by Thursday nightwith less than a month to play.
Accentuate the positive, sir, Muscles advised. We also
play the Gendarmes our last three homies of the season.
If were down eight or nine by Friday night, that last
series wont mean mouse-scat, Mr Musselwhite.
Nosir, I guess not. Everybody sat quiet while we
mulled the crucialness of our next few gamescrunch time,
todays sports hacksd call it. Then Muscles said, Were sure
going to miss Charlie, Mister JayMac.
If youre alibing in advance, youd better
I try not to alibi, Muscles said, barb-sharp. Alibi or no
alibi, were going to miss Charlie a lot.
Weve got a roster spot to fill, Dunnagin said. We
cant play our next dozen or so games with nineteen guys when
LaGrange and everybody else have twenty.
Im working on that. Mister JayMac banged through
the door into the kitchen. The rest of us went gratefully back
to eating, and Kizzy came in with three hot peach pies on a big
lacquered dowel rack.
We beat Quitman again. Henry hit two
glowing, cometlike homers, but I had a measly single in five
plate appearances and didnt score a run.
That night, Henry heard me crying and sat up. You did
well, Daniel. Not once did you strike out. The Hellbenders
won. No need for tears.
S nothing to do with the d-d-damned game.
Then what provokes this despondency? Mr Snows
death? Mr Satterfields departure? Euclids bereavement?
Who wouldntve been depressed? I sure had causes
enough.
Tell me, Henry prompted.
My f-f-father, I said. And that was so. Partly so, anyway.
Maybe more than partly.
Next morning, early, I sloughed downstairs
and sat in a rocker on the porch facing Angus Roadto
take the air and clear the dustbunnies out of my head. The
lawn lay fresh-mown and dewy. A gray catbird tiptoed over the
clippings looking for crickets, grubs, earthworms. Id watched
it for maybe ten minutes, occasional jays or mockingbirds
swooping down to inspect the lawn too, when a figure on a
bicycle came through the gate and pedaled up the drive towards
McKissic House.
The rider wore a split-seam khaki skirt, bobby sox, and a
pair of black and white shoes that kids after the war called
squad cars. She stood off her seat to get more traction, and her
bike squeaked and clattered, swaying from side to side like a
boat in a heavy chop. The rider on that contraption was
Phoebe. She dropped her bike like a hot rivet and bounded up
the porch steps.
Danny, you seen Miss LaRaina?
The questionat six-thirty in the morning, even a Saturday
morningseemed damned abrupt.
My mother, she added.
Id known what she meant, I just hadnt expected to
speak to anyone so early. I shook my head.
Does that mean you aint seen her or you dont think
shes here or you jes dont plan to talk to me?
I havent s-seen her.
Ya think shes here?
I dont know.
Listen. She hadnt come home by the time I went to bed
last night, and she wasnt to home this morning either. Her
bed leaves me clueless cause she hardly ever makes it anyways.
The tic under Phoebes bloodshot eye took me aback.
Think she took the starch out of Musselwhite last
night? Or Curriden? Or whoever the hell happened to ask her
home?
I dont know.
Phoebe paced the high concrete. Id seen her upset before,
but never this unhinged. She stopped, hands on hips.
Well, should I go in there yelling Mama, oh Mama,
please come home?
I dont know. Youd probably sc-scare up a few guys in
their sk-skivvies.
Oh joy. Smelly men in their dingy unmentionables.
We all sh-shower, Phoebe.
Phoebe cocked her head funny. You didnt talk to me at
Mr Snows funeralnot even a piddlin Hi!
I nodded at you. It was a f-funeral, not a ice-cream
social.
You know, you were a damn sight sweeter when you
couldnt talkpliter, more charmin.
Phieuw!
Phoebe ignored my disgust. So you dont think itd do
for me to stomp upstairs calling for my mama?
Nome, I dont.
Suddenlyreally suddenlyPhoebe knelt in front of me
and gripped my thighs with her small, tough-looking hands.
Take me off from here, Danny. Carry me home.
So I did. I pedaled that doddery bike with Phoebe
perched shakily on its handlebars, her dress yanked up to her
sunny red knees. Not once in the whole trip did I put my fanny
to the bikes liver-shaped and liver-tinted seat cushion, but we
never spilled, and Phoebe invited me in for a Co-Cola.
No thanks. I havent had br-breakfast. I was nervous
and wanted to get back.
Spose I said a cherry Coke, Danny? Would a cherry Coke
make you forgit Kizzys cantaloupes n biscuits?
Somehow, coaxed along, I wound up in the living room
of the Pharrams boxy little rental house. I knewas well as, if
not better than, Phoebe did herselfshe was playing me like a
gill-snagged trout, but neither of us knew when shed yanked
or where Id land. We looked at each other a minute.
Then, like a kid at a pool getting rid of her coverup, Phoebe took
off her blouse, showing me a braa brassiere!more
like a thin bandage than the double-barrelled slingshot
Idve expected. She looked frail, wounded almost, in that
bandanna, sort of like the piper kid in that famous painting of a
Revolutionary War fife-and-drum group. Then Phoebes hands
fidgeted behind her back, and the bandage fell away. At least
three guys on the HellbendersFanning, Sudikoff, and Hayhad
bigger bosoms than Phoebe, but the sight of herspear-shaped
and jauntyawed me the way a sunset would a
man healed late in life of blindness.
Phoebe took my hand and led me to her bedroom, where
her bed, unlike her mamas, had a made-up spread and a pretty
folded quilt across its foot. She turned the spread all the way
back, the pears on her chest hardly growing even when she
leaned over to turn it. But how blessed I felt looking at em.
Now you, Phoebe said, facing me straight on.
What do you w-want to d-d-do?
Jes what they do at The Wing n Thigh. She thought
for a moment. With lusty passion.
Were not m-married. And I thought you wanted a
s-s-sojer to, uh, d-do you first.
Married! I bet most human sexs got zero to do with that
n not much with love. A place like The Wing n Thigh tells me
so. And so does my ever-lovin mama, thout sayin a word.
Phoebes voice softened. I care for you, boy. S no fault of
yores you aint a sojer. Take off yore shirt.
I did. My chest caved to the breastbone, gooseflesh broke
out on me like prickly heat.
More, Phoebe said. S yore turn to keep it all goin. If
you care for me too.
There was a desk beside Phoebes truckle bed, with an
old Royal typewriter on it and a photograph of Captain Luther
Trent Pharram in his uniform and service cap. I sat down in
the desk chair so I couldnt see the ferret-eyed captain, and I
untied my shoes. Not much is more ridiculous-looking than a
grown man with his shoes on and his pants around his ankles.
As I heeled off my shoes, Phoebe headed doorwards in her
squad cars.
Where you going?
For a French letter, Danny. Mama keeps em in the
drawer nex her bed.
I d-dont read French.
Goodness, you wontparlay voozhave to. Be skinny
by the time I git back. Even with Miss LaRaina in heat half the
damn time, we prolly aint got all day.
Not much of what Phoebed just said made a hoohah of
sense to me. French letter. Parlay vooz. Besides, I was skinny
even when I wasnt. I recalled from Tenkiller creek dipping just
what shed meant to imply, though, and shed my pants and
undershorts. For the looks of it, more than anything else, I also
rolled down and ditched my socks.
When Phoebe returned, she wore nothing but a pair of
satiny green panties. She hardly had any more hips than I did,
but I thought her sexier than a thousand Venuses on a thousand
pearly half shells. A bird and her bush are worth two out
of hand. Me, I cupped my hands over my lap. That wasnt hard because I
wasnt either. So far, the circumstances of our trystthe
early hour, the unfamiliar bedroom, the funny out-of-whackness
of Phoebes behaviorhad flustered more than
aroused me. I kept waiting for an ashtray to bang down on my
head.
I may look right boyish, Daniel, but I already work like a
woman. You gonna have to put this on.
What?
The French letter. She held up a bronze packet about
the size of a fifty-cent piece, only thicker. Straight off, I knew
what it was. We had them in Oklahoma too.
Thats a rubber.
Yeah, well, thats a right tatty name for it. But call it how
you like, you still got to put it on.
For the first time since this whole freaky episoded begun,
I blushed. The blush scalded me down from my ears, face, and
throat, to my chest, upper arms, and belly, like a head-first
dunk in a turpentine bath. I didnt move.
Phoebe said, You want to do this or not?
I d-dunno. D-d-do you?
Why in a pigs eye you spose I had you bike me home?
Whym I standing her nearlybout birthday new?
Phoebe, I dunno.
My reply teed her off, but she didnt back down an inch
from the vengeance she had in mind. (Not a vengeance on me,
now, but through me.) She curled her finger into the waist band
of her panties, rolled them down her hips and legs, and
stepped clear. I stared. No weedy triangle between her legs, just
a crooked, reddish diamond with pale flesh showing around it
so the tuft itself stood out in reliefas pretty, and as
damaged-looking, as a Special Service Force patch with a bunch of
pulled threads. I stared at it, trembling.
Show me, she said. Its not fair for this to work jes one
way.
I moved my hands. Phoebe knelt with the rubber, which
shed popped from its case. I wasnt feeling horny, though, just
bossed and misplaced. Phoebe examined me, tilting her head to
one side and then the other.
No offense, Danl, but they sort of remind me o turkey
wattlesthe beak n the wattles, you know.
I looked: veiny pink wattles and a small spongy beak. My
groin hair was lighter and sparser than Phoebes, my bashful
equipment as useless as a tissue-paper doorknob. Never in my
life had I felt so exposed and ashamed.
Howm I going to git this on you? Its sorta like wrapping
a pipe cleaner with a rubber band. Phoebe touched.
Oh! she said, lookit the little booger grow.
We wound up on her bed. We worked to fit, then to
please each other the way grownupsre supposed to do.
Phoebes body resisted even though she tried to make it stop.
Her faceher damped lips, her wide eyesshowed the strain
of her fight. I fought tooto stay off the crushable basket of
her ribs, to stay hard, to slide in her dryness, to keep from
running away.
Why do people do this? Phoebe said.
To make other people, I said. (Just then, I couldnt
imagine pleasure entering the equation.)
Id as lief adopt. Or . . . or die childless.
A breeze drifting through the room dried the sweat
my backside. I shivered, and shivered again.
Dont! Phoebe cried. Then: Theres got to
be a better way. Ungh. To make other people. Ungh. Got to.
Unnggh!
I came, not very pleasingly for Phoebe, or me, or the
good name of screwing in general. I hadnt had a more interesting
morning before breakfast since arriving in Highbridge, or
maybe since my own original birthday, grantedbut interesting
isnt the same as delightful, and I wondered if maybe
Henrys creator hadnt hit upon something smart and useful
after all, in sexless parenthood.
Phoebe sort of slipped away from the kiss I tried to plant
on her cold forehead. I got up, gathered my clothes, and went
into the bathroom to lose the drooping rubber, scrub myself
up, and get dressed again. When I returned to Phoebes bedroom,
she lay right where Id left herexcept shed pulled the
sheet over her bosoms and masked her eyes with one freckled
forearm. Why hadnt we set each other smoldering? You usually
get some smoke, maybe even a fire, when you rub two
sticks together.
Okay, she said, not looking at me. Now tell everbody.
Ever Hellbender, ever rival player, ever idjit fan.
I wont tell anybody.
Phoebe sat up, keeping herself covered. Im telling you to
tell, Danny. I want you to.
Gentlemen d-d-dont.
Crap-doodle. Gentlemen dont eat at The Wing n
Thigh.
I d-didnt either. Phoebe and Id bumped into different
dead ends of the same alley maze. Besides, Mister JayMacd
k-k-kill me, Phoeb.
Tote yore sorry sef out of here, you mollycoddle! Git! I
hope I never see youor another slimy willielongs I live!
She didnt cry, but her bottom lip pooched out and rolled over
on itself like a chimpanzees.
I turned, walked through the house, and yanked open the
screen door giving onto the porch.
You drip! Phoebe yelled after me. Tell em alltell
everbodyhow you come over n jazzed me!
I lurched on outside and kicked Phoebes bike. Then I
walked back to McKissic House through Cotton Creek, past a
corner of Alligator Park and then row after row of stalls at the
barely stirring farmers market.
That Saturday afternoon we had a
doubleheader against the Gendarmes, with one game to follow
on Sunday, and a two-game series to begin on Wednesday in
LaGrange. Five games in seven days against the league leaders,
with no more crack at catching them until a three-game homestand
at the fag end of August.
Its do or die, Vito Mariani said in the clubhouse before
Saturdays opener.
Do or die, Turkey Sloan mocked. Do or
die. Lordy, s that the Eye-talian gift of gab?
It is do-or-die time, Mariani said. We lose even one
today, Turkey, we make up no ground at all.
You cant inspire these downhome worldlies with clichéswith
bromides and bushwah.
I shouldnt have to inspire em at all, Mariani said.
Thats Mister JayMacs job. But he aint even here.
Do or die. Turkey Sloan shook his head. Gentlemen, forgive poor
Vito. He shouldve saidhe couldve saidExcel
or expire, Put up or perish, or Suck it in or
succumb, but all that twitched his low-grade dago brain was Do
or die.
Shut up, Sloan, Creighton Nutter said, or Ill dock
you a days pay for pointless jibber-jabber.
Not hush, but shut up. Mister JayMacd left town to find a
replacement for Charlie Snow. In his absence, by decree and
appointment, Nutter was acting Hellbender managerwith
full power to play us where he liked, use his own dugout
strategies, and, if needed, fine our bunglers, layabouts, and
hooligans. Sloan shut up. He knew Nutterd gig him in a
minute.
Well, whether you like Marianis Do or die or Sloans
Suck it in or succumb, we lost our opener to the Gendarmes
and dropped four games off the pace. Roric Gundy pitched
nine innings for our visitors, yielding just three hits and one
run. He no longer telegraphed his curveballsomeoned
finally cautioned him about the telltale flaw in his windup. I
struck out twice, remembering Phoebe nude on her knees and
her parting cry, Tell everybody how you come over here n jazzed
me!
With Jerry Wayne Sosebee on the mound and better
hitting, we won the afternoons second game and finished three
games back, just where wed begun it. Wed missed Charlie
Snows presence, thoughhis whip-quick wrists and reliability
at the plate. I also missed seeing either Phoebe or Miss
LaRaina in the stands. Had they ducked out on me at this
bend in the season? Or galloped off into the boonies with
Mister JayMac on his hush-hush, do-or-die talent search?
On Sunday, ten minutes before game time,
Mister JayMac showed up in our dugout with Charlie Snows
replacement: a thin, pale, twenty-five- or -six-year-old named
Worthy Bebout. Bebout had eyes like a Weimaraners, hair
about that sickly color, and a hand shake as firm as boiled
elbow macaroni. His arms hung too far out of his sleeves, and
his pants ended too high on his legs, leaving his stirrup socks
and sannies exposed and giving him the look of a fannyless
stork.
Mr Bebout hails from Wedowee, Alabama, Mister
JayMac told us. Played semipro ball with Ipenson Textiles out
of Phenix City.
At Mister JayMacs urging, Bebout came along the bench
to shake hands. (Ol pasta grip, Sloan called him later.) He
mumbled his hellos, then sat in the dugouts farthest corner,
his knees and shoulders twisted in and his pale face as empty
and deadpan as a new-bought skillet.
How come hes not in the m-military? I asked Henry.
Henry shrugged, but most of us thought Beboutd finagledor,
worse, maybe even deservedan NP, or neuropsychiatric,
rejection. He gave off the waves of a serious crazy.
Probably because Mister JayMac was still pulling strings
to have him enrolled as a CVL player, Bebout didnt start our
Sunday afternoon game against the Gendarmes. Four innings
along, though, Mister JayMac got a go-ahead from the three-man
commission that ran the league (just as Mister JayMac, by
wile, guile, and noblesse oblige, wanted it to); and he pinch hit
Bebout for Trapdoor Evans at the first chance.
The score stood at two each. Bebout responded by swinging
so hard at three straight Dink Dewhurst curveballs he
almost wrapped himself around his bat. The crowd booed, but
Bebout just unwrapped himself and shuffled back to the dug-out
wearing a quirky smile. With nearly every other Hellbender
watching, Bebout dipped a pinch of snuff from the tin in his
back pocket, sucked it into his mouth, and rubbed his upper
gum with the first joint of his pinky.
The game went on. In the seventh, Bebout made two
super catches, a shoestring grab and a last-second leap-and-snatch
to prevent a Gendarme extra-baser off the Feen-A-Mint
sign. A couple of minutes later, several of us clustered around
him in the dugout to congratulate him.
S okay, Bebout said, refreshing his dip from the snuff
tin thatd made a raised circle on his hip pocket.
As Skinny stood in to bat, Junior Heggie sat down next
to me. Ever dip snuff, Danl?
I shook my head. I was a smoker.
You ever start, dont bum a pinch from Bebout there.
Why not? He t-tight with it?
Oh no, hed give you some all right, but the screwball dips
dirt, he said. That lil tin in his pockets brimful of
loose Wedowee dirt! Dirt, by damn!
Dobbs singled. Quip Parris struck out. I drew a walk.
Worthy Bebout came up behind me in Charlie Snows old
batting slot. The fans cheered him for the catches hed made,
but set themselves for his second CVL at bat with show-me
furrows on their brows. No one could forget his debut as a
hitter: three torso-twisting swings and no contact.
On Dewhursts first pitch, Bebout rippled again. Twirled,
dropped his bat, fell on home plate. A groan went up. This at
bat looked so much like his first one it gave us a powerful sense
of deja vu. Bebout got up, though, and spanked the next pitcha
rolling curveinto the left-field bleachers, and we went on
to defeat the Gendarmes five to two, winning the series and
moving within two games of first place. So what if Bebout had
celebrated his homer by skipping around the bases?
In the clubhouse afterwards, Junior asked Bebout why he
dipped dirt.
Bebout took his snuff tin, screwed off the top, and studied
its contentsrich black Alabama soillike he expected to
find fishing crickets in it.
Its Wedowee loam. Bacca gives you gum rot. Sides, a
fella knows you got dirt in yore snuff tin, he aint keen to borry
it. Mazes me.
What does? I said.
Fellas who aint afeared to slide in dirt act like its gunpowder
when it comes to dippin it.
Back at McKissic House, Mister JayMac
met in the parlor with Worthy Bebout and all fourteen of his
current boarders. He had to find a room for Bebout. Problem
was, every room on every floor already had at least two guys in
it, overcozylike.
Any yall willing to triple up? Mister JayMac said.
The parlor scarcely breathed.
I caint have a room to mysef? Bebout said.
Think youre so hotshot you deserve one? Evans asked
him.
Nosir. Got habits could conflick with whosoever gits
put with me.
Like what? Curriden said. You eat live roosters?
Nosir. I read my Testaments. I speak to my voices. I talk
to my dead brother Woodrow.
Cripes, Curriden said.
Then jes give me a pup tent outside, Bebout suggested.
And until he devised his own indoor answer to the problem,
the pup-tent solution actually went into effect. He slept
on the lawn in a tent from Sunday, August 1, to Thursday,
August 12 (minus five days on the road in the homes of some
of Mister JayMacs friends). Then he moved into quarters
unlike those of anybody else lodging in McKissic House.
Before that meeting ended, though, he asked Mister
JayMac where wed stowed his dip fixings.
Kitchen porch. Nobody herell disturb em.
Later, fetching a colander for Kizzy, I saw those fixings: a
taped cardboard box full of ordinary-looking but fine-grained
dirt. On the sides of this box, with a black Crayola, someone
had crookedly printed
Early in August, Lamar Knowles knocked
on Henrys and my door. Henryd missed breakfast and lay in
bed, face down, one arm hanging off the mattress. As soon as
Lamar saw Henry, he apologized and tried to retreat. He had
that mornings issue of the Highbridge Herald rolled up in one
hand, and he bopped himself in the forehead with it for coming
up so early.
C-cmon in, I said. Its not early, Henry st-stayed out
awful late, thats all. I dragged him in and sat him at my desk;
I plopped down on my bed. Fan noise had covered Lamars
entrance. It wouldve taken a cattle prod to goad Henry awake,
and I told Lamar so. That news seemed to reassure him. He
opened out his newspaper.
You try to keep up with our parent club? he asked.
The Phutile Phillies?
Yessir. No other.
Only to n-n-notice they aint doing so great.
Well, on Sunday, their owner-president, Mr Cox,
canned Bucky Harris as manager and hired Freddie Fitzsimmons.
Take a look. He passed me the sports page.
I read the story. The Phillies had dropped to seventh in
the National League standings. This lurch towards the cellar
had so irked William D. Cox hed given the press an eight-page
statement accusing Bucky Harris of calling his players those
jerks and writing them off as losers. Harris had learned of the
statement on Sunday evening. On Monday he said if anybody
in the Phillies organization qualified as a jerk, it was Cox:
And hes an all-American jerk. If I had said any of those
things, the Herald quoted Harris, and Lamar read out loud,
I certainly would be the first to admit them.
Whaddaya think? Lamar said.
I shrugged. B-b-business as usual.
Lamar tapped my knee. Mebbe so, but the way you and
Jumbo been playing, it could mean a heckuva break for yall.
Uh-uh, I said.
Sure. Look, the Phils first baseman and shortstop aint
playing worth used ration stamps. In fact, Harris kept switching
out different guys at those spots. It could happen, you and
your roomy getting a call-up.
It could n-n-not happen too. Or it could happen to
Henry and not to m-me.
Or vice versa. I dont say this to amp up the pressure,
Danny, jes to remind you your play here has two goals, winning
us the CVL pennant and training yourself for the bigs. Dont
forget that second one, kid. When Lamar offered me the
paper, I shook my head. Fitzsimmons might ask the Phils to
call yall as replacements for Jimmy Wasdell and Gabby Stewart.
Charlie Brewster plays short for the Phillies too, I said.
So does Babe Dahlgren.
Yeah, but Stewart and Brewsterll be lucky to hit .220
together. Dahlgren plays more first base, subbing for Wasdell,
than shortstop. He could use yalls help.
Going up to the bigs from a Class C club seemed about
as likely as Hitler catching the Holy Spirit and joining the
Pentecostals.
Even if it happened, Lamar said, you could end up
warming the bench like I do now, or gitting two or three starts
in throw-away games towards the end of the season. Still, those
games could set yall for starters roles next year, specially if this
stupid wars still on.
I hope it aint.
Well, if it happens, yallll deserve it. Lamar blushed.
Itd tickle me silly. He stood up and laid the Herald
sports page on my desk. Show that to ol Jumbo Hank. Tell him what
I said. If he ever wakes up.
Later, I showed Henry the paper and told him what
Lamard told me, that the Phillies new manager, Freddie
Fitzsimmons, might try to call us up. Henry read the story. His
licorice-whip lips curled into a smile. He slapped his craggy
knees.
Wouldnt that be delicious?
If Id ever wondered about Henrys desire to hop from
the CVL to the neon glare of the majors, his behavior now
made me see how deeply hed planted the roots of his hopes.
Maybe Lamard known Henry better than I had.
On Wednesday night, we played the Gendarmes
the opener of a two-game series in the Prefecture.
Strock started Sundog Billy Wallace, the ace of his staff, and
Sundog Billy, on better than four days rest, hurled a flawed
masterpiece.
I say flawed because the umping team, with Happy
Polidori over at first, blew call after call in the Gendarmes
favor. If a break could go to the homies, Polidori and his crew
made sure it did. During the middle-fifth changeover, a bunch
of us discussed the situation.
These officials will home-cook the flesh from our
bones, Henry said. We will disintegrate in their pressure
cooker.
Hit one out to dead center, Jumbo, Muscles said. No
way they can overrule that kind of shot.
Dont bet on it, Hoey said. Plate umps likely to say
he stepped out of the batters box.
Knock off the alibiing, Mister JayMac said from the
dugouts edge, especially before these guysve beaten you.
These guys? Hoey said. You talking about the
Gendarmes or the umps?
Hush, Mr Hoey. Well win or lose this one based on
what we do on the field, not on the umpires whims.
Trout tripe, Hoey said. Mr Sayighs promised
Polidori and his pal a pipe-job from his lovely A-rab daughters
if they gyp us a time or twelve this evening.
Mister JayMac jabbed a finger at Hoey. Knock it off.
You impugn a friend, slander his kids, defame the character of
CVL officials, and degrade yourself. Enough.
Yessir, Hoey said sarcastically.
Creighton Nutters pitching kept us in it until the seventh. In the top
of that inning, I came up with Skinny Dobbs on firsthed drawn
Sundog Billys only walk of the eveningand one out. I laid down
a bunt, dropping it off my Red Stix bat as pretty as a biscuit and about as
frisky. Ed Bantling scrambled out from behind the plate, Wallace off the
mound, and Binkie Lister in from third. Although Lister made the play,
his throw to first baseman Harvey Coombs got there a full
second too late to turn my infield hit into just another
well-placed sacrifice.
Polidori blew the call. Trumpeted it. Tubad it. Thumbed
me out. Claimed Id jumped over the bag. Shoot, Id banged my
ankle hitting it.
Hoey, coaching first, exploded. Tore into Polidori like a
terrier into a rats nest. Jigged before him like a runamok
Osterizer. It was like hed forgotten, now I had my voice back, I
could gripe for myself. Then Hoey flat-handed Polidori in the
chest and staggered him.
YOURE OUTTA HERE! Polidori shouted, a hand
on his heart.
Hoey wouldnt leave. Hed gone flaming bonkers. He
cursed and snarled, edging around like a cougar on uppers.
NobodyI mean, nobodycould slow his het-up prowl. The
crowd leapt to its feet. When they booed, their boos fell like
ton upon ton of flapping canvas. It scared me pissless.
Fans started hurling sample jars of Burma-Shave onto the
field, heaving the bulk of these samples towards first base. Just
before the game, a pair of fast-talking drummers had passed
out the samples to every adult male coming in. Now, those jars
rained down like porcelain hail. One jar clipped Hoey on the
arm. Polidori, Coombs, and I backed deeper into the outfield.
Hoey followed afternot to escape the barrage but to keep
cursing the hapless Happy Polidori, for the jar thatd hit him
had had no more effect than a poppy seed.
The PA announcer scolded the crowd. The police threatened
arrests. In the outfield, Hoey continued to fume and
storm. Finally, Mister JayMac sent Muscles, Curriden,
Fanning, and Sudikoff out thereat some peril, for the crowd
started catcalling at onceto subdue Hoey and drag him,
thrashing and frothing, if need be, into the clubhouse. This
took several minutes because Hoey tried to elude our press-gang,
meanwhile heaping dogshit on Polidons pedigree.
You ignorant dago! Hoey dodged Mister JayMacs
posse. Your mama bore you purblind on muscatel!
You bigot! Polidori cried. You froggy bilge mucker!
Muscles tackled Hoey behind second base. The crowd
cheered. Curriden, Fanning, and the others picked him up and,
with Muscles gripping his belt, littered him back towards our
dugout like a battlefield casualty. I scurried along behind them:
Polidori had called me out and wouldnt change his mindnot
in front of these fans, not after blotting up so much of
Hoeys abuse.
Once the cops, the PA announcer, and our rescue squad
had restored some order, and the groundskeepers had a
wheel-barrow full of Burma-Shave jars, Sundog Billy struck out Heggie to
squelch our rally. Nutter shut down the Darmes after
a lead-off single in the bottom half of the inning, and so on
and so on, until the bottom of the ninth, with the score locked
at two apiece and half the citizenry of LaGrange trying to
deafen us with cow bells.
To hell wi the Hellbenders! To hell with em all! Tonight
they go down! Tonight they do fall!
I felt nose high to a tics rump. All the vocal scorn had
even begun to get to Nutter. Veteran or no, he could sense the
rising heat. He threw two wild pitches in a row and walked the
Gendarme shortstop Tucker DeShong. Bang! Mister JayMac
lifted Nutter for Vito Mariani, who got the next two batters to
pop up. One more out and we went into extra innings.
Cliff Nugent, LaGranges center fielder and best clutch
hitter, came up. Mariani got two strikes on him and wasted
two pitches trying to sucker him into a strikeout. His fifth
pitch, a curve, broke on the outer edge of the platetoo close
for a man with a couple of strikes to let go byand Nugent
drove it on a dying clothesline into the right-field corner. Foul.
Six inches foul. Maybe a foot.
Happy Polidori watched the ball sail over his head and
skid on the divoted turf. He faced second base and chopped
his right arm down to signal the drive fair. Nugent sped up
again, rounded first, and churned for second. Skinny Dobbs
couldnt believe the call, but he chased down the ball, whichd
already caromed off the fence in foul territory, and tried to
throw it home to keep DeShong from scoring. The throw
reached Dunnagin on three feeble hops, too late, and the stands
swayed like racketing freight cars.
Mais oui! chanted the crowd: But yes!
The Gendarmes had beaten us by a run and stretched
their lead to three full games. Polidorid blown the most crucial
call in the entire ballgame. Mister JayMac couldnt protest it
because a hundred or more people had jumped the fences to
pound their heroes on the backs, and Polidori and his fellow
ump had already hurried off the field.
In the clubhouse, Mister JayMac paced a
strip of concrete like a badger.
Home cooking! Buck Hoey shouted. Because hed
showered after his ejection, he wore civvies, like Mister JayMac.
Turkey Sloand already given him the partisan Hellbender take
on Polidoris gaffe.
They stole this one! somebody yelled.
Bastids ambushed us!
They bought Polidoris ass, thass what! They bought it!
YALL HUSH! Mister JayMac cried.
We hushed. Mister JayMac had his chin on his breast-bone
and his hands fisted in the pockets of his pants. Hed
stopped pacing, but one leg jiggled, like the leg of a hound
agitated by a belly rub.
I dont think Mr Polidori japped us once this eveningtill
that call on Mr Nugents liner to right.
He had it in for us all evenin, sir! Curriden said.
I asked neither your nor anyone elses opinion.
Curriden shut his eyes. All of us wanted to denounce the
one-sided calls and the unruly crowd. Hometowning hurt. Itd
cost us an important game. But we simply stood in our sweaty
smelly funk waiting for the Word.
Mr Polidori made beaucoups of mistakes, Mister
JayMac said, but all but the last one stemmed, I believe, from
misapprehension and the bullying of the crowdwhich, let me
remind you, pays its money to supply that ingredient. Rafe
Polidori knows his business. Under ordinary circumstances
Mister JayMac, Muscles said. Sir, I
An upraised hand cut him off. he calls em as he sees
em, and he usually sees them pretty well. Tonight, gentlemen,
what we witnessed in the bottom of the ninth did not signal
any blatant Gendarme bribery, but Mr Polidoris personal
response to the shenanigans of Ligonier Hoey two innings
earlier.
Sir
Dont interrupt, Hoey. (Not Mr Hoey, just
Hoey.) Mr Polidori should be an impartial ajudicator on
the ball field, but, like all of us, he consists of flesh, blood, and
certain deep-seated prejudices bespeaking the imperfection of
his humanity. What was brittle in him snapped when you
baited him beyond his God-given level of tolerance.
Youre blaming me for the bastids call?
For precipitating it. Yes I do. Your actions in our half of
the seventh stank on ice.
I was standing up for Dumbo here. For the Hellbenders.
You like to got Mr Boles conked with a shave-cream jar
and the game ruled a forfeit against us. Mr Boles escaped a
concussion, thank God, but your team, I remind you, lost.
Nobody spoke.
Stay tonight and tomorrow with the family putting you
up, but dont report to the Prefecture tomorrow. Read a
magazine. Listen to the radio. Dont show up here. Stay away.
Am I suspended?
Let me think on that. Mister JayMac looked us square
in the eyes. Go on and shower.
Bebout offered Hoey a pinch of Wedowee snuff, to cheer
him up, but Hoey knocked Bebouts tin to the floor.
On Thursday night, without Hoey, we
beat LaGrange seven to one behind the pitching of Fadeaway
Ankers. The next day we traveled to Cottonton, where we
swept a three-game series from the Boll Weevils. Meanwhile,
the Gendarmes lost two of three to Opelika, sending us home
tied for first with them.
We had almost four full days of rest before our next
home gameagainst the Eufaula Mudcats. During that time,
Mister JayMac got busy, mostly over the telephone. On Thursday,
Henry took me aside in the parlor to spell out the latest
personnel developments as transmitted over the club grapevine.
Mister JayMac received permission from the Phillies to
trade Mr Hoey, Henry said. He has done so.
Tr-trade Buck Hoey? Wherell he g-go?
ScuttlebuttHenry was proud of this wordScuttlebutt
has it that the Gendarmes have bought him for a handsome
sum of cash and a utility player.
I had a sudden edgy heart thrill. Buck Hoey, gone! The
last guy on the club who still called me Dumbo, the only one
who rememberedwho held a grudge aboutthe incident
thatd resulted in him wearing boot-blacked carpet slippers for
a few days. Why, though, had Mister JayMac traded him to a
team in a nip-and-tuck pennant race against us?
Because Mr Sayigh offered him the most lucrative return
on his property, Henry said.
I wondered about Hoeys family and their rented house.
What would happen to Linda Jane? To Matt, Carolyn, Ted,
and Danny, my accidental namesake?
As a concession to the hardship spawned by this trade,
Henry told me, the Hoeys and their children may stay in their
dwelling rent-free until September. Mister JayMac proffered
Mr Hoey this compact, and Mr Hoey took it, albeit bitterly.
If hes a Gendarme, he c-cant live in Highbridge.
A gravel-quarry owner in LaGrange who admires Mr
Hoeys aggressive style has refurbished a shotgun hovel only
blocks from the Prefecture. Mr Hoey will dwell there rent-free.
During my talk with Henry, Id heard a muffled hammering
and some other peculiar noises. Suddenly, Worthy Bebout
stood in the parlor, a carpenters belt cocked on his hips.
Think Mrs Hoeyd like a man around the house while
her hubbys living away?
We stared at Bebout, like hed just asked our opinion of
baby eating or nude evangelism. I mean nuthm smutty. Jes
thought she might want to rent the bed space and cook me
some meals while our season lasts.
Mrs Hoey likely doesnt have any b-bed space, I said.
The Hoeys got f-four younguns.
Then I reckon I aint been wasting my time. Bebout
picked up a rucksack next to a parlor sofa. Come see.
McKissic House had a storm and potato cellar you
reached through a door set under the staircase to the
second floor. Beboutd spent his morning down there
transforming one end of that clayey hole into a bed chamber.
Seeing it, Henry and I understood why hed asked about
boarding with the Hoeys. A Spanish dungeon wouldve been
cheerier.
Sorta pneumonia-y, I said.
Sorta buggy too. Bebout yanked the overhead bulb so
it threw a splash of light into one corner. Camelback crickets
clung to the pocked clay wall and sproinged around the
floor. A row of blackened canning jars sparkled on a plank
shelf at shin height. The jars held gloopy sludge. I began to
quease.
Henry and I beat it out of there as fast as politeness
would let us. In the parlor we found Kizzy sprawled in a cushy
chair, the hem of her dress hammocked between her legs and a
mortuary fan tick-tocking away in her hand. She never used the
parlor. She hardly ever sat down.
Kizzy, you s-sick? I asked her.
I zausted, thats what I am. Used out. Nigger-weary.
But why?
Bless you, Mister Danny, cause I aint got no hep. Look
like the McKissics trying to chase me into a tirement home.
Wunst upon a time, I could count on Miss Giselle hauling
herself over here to hep do breakfuss. No mo. She aint showed
here five days running, and the ony scuse she got is, the heat
done prostrate her. Like its a e-lixir to me.
Henry said, Mrs Lorrows, you should recruit some of
us to help. He kept glancing into the foyer, though, like
expecting Bebout to trudge into view with a dug-up cadaver.
I awready gots me two of you ballplayers a week, but
this weeks two is good-fo-nuthin clumses.
I looked at Henry. We c-could help, c-couldnt we? I
liked to cook. Mixing up biscuit dough reminded me of arts
and crafts in grade school back in Tenkiller.
But Henryd already turned away. I must borrow Mister
JayMacs automobile. I must take a trip. He waved good-bye
with a stiff flapping motion and lurched through the dining
room on his way to the McKissics bungalow.
Darius was mo hep than Miss Giselle ever knew, Kizzy
said. I sho do miss him.
Hoeys replacement from the GendarmesI
never did learn how much cash money Mr Sayigh had to ante up
tooarrived on the Friday before our weekend homestand against Eufaula.
Friday the thirteenth, a bad-omen day . . . if you bought into such
malarkey. The replacement player turned out to be Wilbur Fat Boy
Fortenberry, a bookend, physique-wise, for Pete Haystack Hay.
Mister JayMac introduced him to us at a breakfast Id helped Kizzy fix.
Say it aint so, Quip Parris said. The Brown Bombers
gonna need a new pair of shocks.
Dont fry no mo chicken fo dinner! Muscles shouted
towards the kitchen. Take Fat Boy here out to the nearest coop
and let him inhaleatll save everybody time!
But Fortenberry had only one plump biscuit and two
slotted spoonfuls of yellow scrambled eggs before bidding us
farewell and riding out to Cotton Creek with Mister JayMac.
He had a familya roly-poly wife and two Fortenberry
doughboysand Mister JayMac had arranged for him to rent
Charlie and Vera Jo Snows old house.
Henry said not a word, either during Fortenberrys debut
or afterwards when Muscles second-guessed adding a thirty-year-old
tub of bear grease to our roster. Henryd veered off
into Cloud-cuckoo-land, like he hadnt come all the way back
from Alabama yet. His business over there yesterday had somehow
stalled his swim through the summer. Or else Friday the
Thirteenths didnt agree with him.
Anyway, I spent the morning after Fortenberrys arrival
washing dishes with Sosebee and Fanning and cleaning snap
beans for the pregame meal wed eat at two. Kizzy worked
nonstop to turn out this ritual feast. Even married Hellbenders
had invitations, although usually only Sudikoff and Hay bothered
to come. Mister JayMac almost always ate with us too, but
after helping the Fortenberrys settle in, hed posted home to
see about the heat-fatigued Miss Giselle.
Even with Mister JayMac absent, the dining room was
louder than a party suite in the Tower of Babel. Pork chops,
chicken, country-fried steak. A dozen different vegetables. Four kinds of
pies. Given the direction of the windsouth-by-southeastevery
person in town mustve had a saliva buildup.
Suddenly Phoebe burst through the swinging door from
the kitchen. I hadnt seen her for nearly two weeks, and some
of the words shed spoken then still chimed like breaking soda
bottles in my memory: I hope I never see youor another slimy
willielong as I live! (Just for instance.)
My appetite died. My inner organs blended themselves
into an ebony glop like that trapped in the storm cellers
canning jars. Phoebe probably hadnt come to testify to my
tenderness as a lover. I didnt know why shed come, but her
presenceto one side of Muscless head-of-the-table spotput
everybody, me especially, on notice our meal would cause
bigger problems than gas and oversnug belts. She let Muscles
finish saying grace, bless her, and Muscles offered her his chair.
No thank you. Ive done et. Go on, Muscles, sit back
down, okay? She waited, arms behind her back, until Muscles
obeyed her. Dishes began to pass, serving spoons to unload,
silverware to glitter. Phoebe wouldnt meet my eye, or I
wouldnt meet hers, each of us glancing away whenever the
other made a feint at contact.
Well, Missy, what can we do for you? Muscles said.
Stay away from my mama. Let her be the decent person
she was till Daddy went overseas.
That riveted everybodys attention. Silverware stopped clinking,
and the radio in the parlortuned to a soap operasounded
a couple of knob twists louder than it had a second
ago. Embarrassment settled like a clammy rubber sheet.
Wars a horrible thing, Muscles saidconsolingly, I
guess.
Men are horrible things, Phoebe said.
Careful, mouthy girl, Evans said. Whats a titwren of a
piece like you know about men anyways?
Moren youd ever figger, Mr Evans.
Oh God, I thought, shes come over here to tell everybody
about our Saturday-morning folly. She wants Mister
JayMac to drop me in creosote, roll me in feathers, and send
me back to Oklahoma hanging upside-down from a cane pole.
Like mother like daughter. Evans lipped an ugly sneer.
Reese Curriden cracked Evans in the mouth with his
elbow. Then he took Evans backwards to the floor, choking
him, his thumbs like screw-bolts under Evanss jaw. Five or six
guys stood up, but Henry and I stayed seated, benumbed or
maybe just too confused to act. Evans, flat on his back in the
toppled chair, waved his hands at his shoulders to show he gave
up. Curridan let go just as Muscles was about to drag him off.
I say, Menre horrible things, and yall jump like
red-neck crackers to prove it, Phoebe said.
Evans stayed mute this time. So did everybody else, and
Phoebe walked from Muscles at the tables head to Henry at its
foot, without seeming to care shed interrupted an important
pregame energy-stoker. Some of our fellasBebout, Fadeaway,
Sosebeedug in and ate, but most of us waited for a payoff, a
backfire loud enough to call Mister JayMac. Phoebes eyebrows
sparkled with sweat. Her skin shone like a swimmers.
How many of yallve cuckolded my daddy? she said.
Fadeaway lifted his head. Cold-cocked your daddy?
Cuckolded, Dunnagin told him.
S what I said, cold-cocked. Fadeaway spoke around a
mouthful of greens. How many of usve knocked her daddys
lights out? Her question dont make sense.
How many of yallve slept with my mama. You Waycross
boys got cow flops for brains, Mr Ankers?
Fadeaway started to rise, but Curriden rose with him, and
Fadeaway dropped back into his chair again.
Gimme a show of hands, Phoebe said. All yall whore
guilty as scarlet sin, raise em high.
Phoebe, Muscles said, this is a bad idea, child. Ive had
some damned bad uns myself, and I know.
Phoebe jumped all over Muscles. You could start everbody
off, Mr Musselwhite. Whynt you lift yore own hand
first? A team capn should set a zample.
Phoebe, I
Put your damned ol hand up, Lon K. Musselwhite! You
think I want this to take thole rotten weekend?
Muscles raised his hand. He didnt do it halfway either.
He stuck his arm straight up, a macelike fist bristling at the
end. He kept a grum face too. When nobody else at table did
anything, Phoebe turned to Reese Curriden.
You too. You dont think everbody down at Hellbender
Pond on the Fourth figgered you and Mr Musselwhite was
tusseling over spare ribs, do you? Git yore hand up.
Phoebe, a hand in the air heres sort of like crowing in
the rooster room, Curriden said.
Yore proud of screwing my mama? Of doing dirt to a
sojer overseas?
Well, Phoebe, some of usre just called to a different set
of arms.
Evans guffawed. A few other he-manly HellbendersFanning,
Parris, Mariani, Fadeawaygiggled like Camp Fire
girls walking by a cherub statue. My queasmess took on a
lumpy sharpness, like ice cubes shifting in a plastic bag.
If you aint ashamed, raise yore disgusting hand! Phoebe
stabbed a potato with a serving fork and held it over her head,
meaning, Git em up, git em up.
Slowly, Curriden raised his hand. Now he and Muscles
made a leery pair, the only two players readysort ofto
admit theyd abetted Miss LaRaina in her infidelities.
Who else? Phoebe said. Phoebe sees all, Phoebe knows
all. Fess up while itll still git you right with God n me.
No one joined the hands-up club.
All right, Mr Musselwhite. All right, Mr Curriden. I
forgive yall, you sneaky sonsabitches.
Forgiveness did it. Suddenly, Dunnagin, Sosebee, and
Parris raised their hands, Parris several beats slower than the
other two. Five out of fifteen men, a third of the Hellbenders
in McKissic House.
Swell, Phoebe said. Any more?
Miss LaRaina put the mash on me last season, Sosebee
said. Before yore daddyd even got his tail out of town.
For Gods sake, Jerry Wayne, shut up, Dunnagin said.
But Phoebed already walked around Henry and laid a
hand on his shoulder. Her hand looked like a doily draped over
the crown of an armoire. When Muscles disgustedly lowered
his arm, so did the other four men. Phoebe didnt care.
Hey, Mr Clerval, didnt Mama vamp you into her bed
too? Mens big as you jes seem to pull her, automatic-like.
Then she musta run up on Quip there in the dark,
Worthy Bebout said.
Can it, Muscles told Bebout, pretty mildly.
Henrys blotchy face crawled with embarrassment. I have
always treated your mother with courtesy, Miss Pharram. And
she has always reciprocated, in word and deed, my regard for
her. I decry this depreciation of her character.
Bushwa n Burma-Shave, Mr Clerval. Why do you lie to
me? Yore her latest throb.
Henry scraped his chair back and stood up. Phoebes
hand slipped from his shoulder like a wind-nudged scarf. I
rarely lie, he said. Nor do I now. Mrs Pharram and I have
never been paramours. Such allegations wound her more deeply
than they ever could me; I resent them unequivocally on her
behalf. Excuse me. I can hardly eat under these conditions. He
left the dining room and trudged upstairs. Noisily.
Phoebe sat down in his chair without trying to pull it
back up to the table. Her feet didnt reach the floor. So which
one of yalls seeing my mama now? Or is it one of them rotten
creeps out to Cotton Creek?
Phoebe, your mamas got standards, Muscles said. She
never messes with married men. That reduces the possibility
shell hurt anyone but herself and her . . . her friend.
Whatm I, Mr Musselwhite? A hank of hair? And whats
my daddy, cannon fodder?
Kizzy came in. I had the feeling shed heard everything
and bided her time until a chance to play peacemaker came up.
Hush now, gal. They gon hear you aw the way over to
the farmers market. Let the mens eat. Come in here with me
and have some coconut cream pie. She eased Phoebe out of
Henrys chair and stepped her back towards the kitchen,
hugging Phoebe to her with a flour-dusted arm.
I dont like coconut, Phoebe said. I told you that bout
a zillion times, Kizzy. A zillion n one.
Then dont eat it. Have a slice of my apple instead.
At the door, Phoebe made Kizzy halt. She turned back
towards the table and pierced me with a glittering, green-eyed
stare. Did you tell em, Danny? Did you make shore ever last
one of em knew?
I couldnt speak.
Knock it off, Phoeb, Muscles said. This is crap.
Whats to t-t-tell? I said. Theres nothing to tell.
Phoebes eyes seemed to pinwheel a question at me, then
a look of understanding, and finally a thank-youor, at least,
a grudging smile.
Kizzy banged her hip into the swinging door and more or
less dragged Phoebe through it into a realm of wood-stove heat
and Kizzy-made delectables.
Eufaula had a decent ball club. Early in
the season the Mudcatsd climbed to second on several occasions,
jockeying with Opelika and LaGrange for the league
lead. They always played us tough, especially when Zaron
Childs pitched for them. That Friday evening Childs shut us
out on a two-hitter, yielding safeties only to Worthy Bebout
and to Norm Sudikoff as a pinch hitter. Milt Frye announced
the Gendarmes had routed the Mockingbirds over to Quitman.
Their win dropped us one game off the pace, with ten games
remaining.
In the clubhouse, after Mister JayMac had praised Childs
for his pitching and retreated to the ticket office, Curriden
groused, Childs threw great, but Mister JayMacs great-niece
softened us up for the bastid at dinner.
Dont blame Phoebe, Muscles said. We stunk.
Look who got our hitsBebout, who didnt know what
she was talking about, and Sudikoff, who wasnt there to hear.
Sidewinder Childs didnt beat us. Phoebe Pharram did.
Its a poor sort of man who cant overcome some vexatious
talk to play up to his capabilities, Henry told Curriden.
Listen to Mr Zero-for-Four, Curriden said. And didnt that
little gals vexatious talk chase you clean off?
Can it, Lamar Knowles said. The games over.
For some reason, everybody canned it. We all showered
and dressed in a starched and testy silence.
On Saturday afternoon, calmer and better
rested, we drubbed the Mudcats with a barrage of extra-base
hits and a sideshow of stolen bases. Meanwhile, the Mockingbirds
beat the Gendarmes. These results locked us and the
Darmes in another first-place tie, our second of the month.
We just had to keep the heat on Emmett Strock and his gang.
Eufaulas manager, Grover Traffley, worked to stymie our
momentum. He called on Zaron Childs, on one days rest, to
face us again. Childs yielded nine hits, but only three runs, and
the Mudcats beat us by scraping up a patchy rally in the top
of the ninth and holding us scoreless in our final at bat. Naturally,
the Gendarmes beat the Birds again, and we fell a game
off the lead with eight games left, our last three a shoot-em-up
showdown at McKissic Field.
Henry went out the window. He figured
me dead to the world, but I heard him. The heatd come down
so pitiless on Highbridge that, before lying down, Id yanked
my sheets off my bed, carried them down the hall, and soaked
them in cold water in the shower stall. Then Id spread them
on my mattress, stripped naked, and stretched out on them
across from our fan. Doing all that had miffed Henry, but
hedve never admitted it, even if Id driven bamboo slivers
under his fingernails. Me, I didnt care. Somehow or other, I
had to get cool.
Anyway, I heard him when he went out. Without even
trying, a guy Henrys size could make a window-sash weight
bump in its groove. He took up so much space that, when he
left, you felt a Henry-shaped pocket in the air. I sat up, my
chest already dry as talc, my backside still damp from the
clammy sheets.
Had Pearl the opposum come back? I crept over and
peered out. Henryd already reached the fire stairs second-floor
landing. I ducked back inside and pulled on a pair of jeans,
nearly zippering my cock in my rush to follow him.
It aint Pearl, I told myself on the fire stairs. Not even
Henryd give up this much sleep to befriend a possum. A
judgment I right quick proved.
Henryd angled off into the pole-bean rows making up
one corner of the victory garden between McKissic House and
the bungalow behind it. I crept barefooted down the fire stairs
and over the grass after him. A craggy chunk of moon silvered
the garden, and Henrys head and chest poked up so high I
could see him picking his way even among the curling vines.
Although hed sworn a few days back he seldom lied, I knew
hed lied to me at least once. Also, his old impersonation of a
human being was a Big Lie, one he ached to make true.
Anyway, creeping through velvety squash leaves, I half
expected Miss LaRaina to spring up like Ruth amid the corn, a
gleaner of leftover male hungers come to feed not only her
weird Elimelechs appetite but also her own. So it dumfounded
me when the voice I heard talking to Henry belonged not to
Phoebes wayward mama, but to Mister JayMacs porcelain-pretty
wife, Miss Giselle.
Why here? she said. Dariuss old apartment wouldve
been more private. Leaves hid the woman from me, but even
lying belly down with my cheek on a root-laced mass of clay, I
knew her voice.
Just so. Henrys voice was a gentle bassoon. Discovery
there would mean disgrace for us. Discovery here would afford
us yet some hope of preserving our reputations.
But it isnt very amenable to . . . to play. Miss
Giselle laughed, girlishly. I couldnt remember hearing her
laugh before, and the feel of it sent a troop of caterpillars
marching pleasantly down my spine.
Giselle, we mustnt proceed on this precipitant course.
How you talk. I love how you talk. In fact, Henrys
protest tickled the stew out of Miss Giselle. She laughed a little
harder, pulling herself to Henrys chest. You sound like
somebody out of a Brontë book.
On the road, I have few other
Shhh. You can find a happier line to jilt me with than,
We mustnt proceed on this precipitant course. How about
To go on as we have would be curtains for us both? She
laughed again, but I didnt know why.
It frightens me, this series of trysts, Henry said. We
expose to heartbreak even those from whom we hide.
Hide? Whos hiding?
Dont torment me. Neither tease nor quibble.
For a moment, Miss Giselle and Henry stopped talking. I
heard them hug, her crinoline against his T-shirt, and wriggled
to see past the squash leaves and coiling bean vines to their
meeting placebut with no luck. Then Miss Giselle said,
Come with me, big fella, chuckling, and I could hear them
rustling through the garden again. I rose to my knees and
crawled hard myself. They went even faster, rattling foliage and
snapping stalks, so I penguin-waddled after.
Following them got trickier the farther into the garden we
went. Tomato plants and other knee-high crops began to replace
the beans and walls of tasseled sweet corn thatd shielded me earlier. I
could see better, but so could my prey and thenWHOOSH!the
stalks in the next garden section got taller, a
copse of leafy half-pikes. The lovers vanished into it like
Hansel and Gretel into an enchanted wood. Henry sank beneath
the okra stalks, and Miss Giselle eased into his lap.
And why have you led me here? Henry said.
To rekindle your ardor, Miss Giselle said. Forget all
musts and shoulds. Behold the okra and read my mind.
I edged nearer. The okra leaves shivered. The gouged
profile of the moon spilled a soft pewter on their stalks and
seamed pods. The pods stood up or out, like tapered hard-ons.
If leprechauns could reach the height and hot-bloodedness of
men, this was how their members would look in the real world:
a forest of tender, silver-green pricks.
Long have I desired to free myself of animal compulsion,
Henry said. Until you, I believed I had.
Well, I want to enslave myself to it. Dont let cowardly
scruple send me back to my dry, dry marriage.
You seek revenge for infidelity and neglect?
Well, sure. But more of what I want has to do with . . .
holding and being held. Riding your body to places I didnt
believe I could visit anymore.
I am a monster. A freak. The caprice of a tortured mans
vanity.
Henry, youre beautiful.
I should offer you that homage.
Holding me, you do. I feel it from the inside out.
Even when I cry, Kariak!
Cry what you like. I cant reproach a man whose emotional
faithfulness to his only wife has outlasted her death.
No. But we must end this deceit, this betrayal of both
Mister JayMac and our better selves.
This sweet deceit. Call it sweet.
Dont torment me. Neither tease nor quibble.
Shhhh. Look here. Miss Giselle grabbed an okra stalk.
Dont. It will produce an insupportable itch. He meant
that the prickly hairs on the okra pods would.
I have you for that. Here. Miss Giselle snapped off a pod several
inches long. Kizzy or Euclid or a boarder should have picked this
one already. Theyre tenderestunlike youwhen
smaller. See. This one has a horny rind.
Henry took the pod and flung it away. It whirled through
the okra forest and struck me on the neck. I touched my grated
skin and ducked even closer to the ground.
Do you like gumbo? Miss Giselle said. The clear sweet
ooze of the pod? The way it thickens and quickens? Sitting on
Henrys knee, she kissed him on the forehead.
But we make nothing together, Henry whispered. I
have lifeless seed and you a desolated womb.
We make each other happy. Miss Giselle shifted so her
hands clutched his shoulders and her hips rose and fell to an
unforced rhythm. I lay on the blush-fed thumping of my heart.
GOD! Henry shouted, a thunderclap. I expected McKissic
House to empty, our teammates to come pouring out to
see whatd happened. I didnt dare move. Henryd know me for
a snoop, and Miss Giselle would have me booted off the team.
After a time, Henry and Miss Giselle moved again, crinoline
on cotton. I hugged the earth.
Take me to Dariuss old place. You cant leave me now.
But the possibilities of discovery, scandal, disgrace
Now, Henry. Now!
Henry gathered up Miss Giselle. He carried her through
the okra, tomatoes, squash, beans, sweet peas, cucumbers, and
corn towards the Bombers garage and the room above it where
Miss Giselles faithless husbands bastard son had lived and
grieved the biggest part of his resentful adulthood.
As soon as theyd gone, I crept quietly back to McKissic
House.
Two hours later Henry came to bed. I
pretended sleep. He pretended to believe it. But for an hour or
more, he sat on his mattress with his arms around his knees, a
gray hulk in our cramped and steamy room.
Playing ball, you forgot the war. Riding
the Brown Bomber, you read the papers or talked about it. The
fact my dadd died in the Aleutians made me listen up to any
news from the Akskan theater.
On a road trip to Lanett, I read a story in the Highbridge
Herald about Allied forces invading the island of Kiska, only to
findafter taking beaucoups of casualties in the bedlam and
fog:the Japsd already evacuated it. In other words, wed
defeated an enemy no longer there. The press called it the
blunder at Kiska. Nobody could figure how, or when, the Japsd
managed to pull their otherwise doomed troops off the island.
I showed this story to Henry, whod been riding with his head
lolling against the window and his hands twitching in his lap.
He read it and handed the paper back.
Stupid, I said. We let em get away.
The resourcefulness of the Japanese spared thousands
from the maw of death. Why do you long to glut it?
Theyre Japs, Henrybloodthirsty, conniving
m-monkeys.
A few may deserve your censure. Many more do not.
War homogenizes the good and the bad. I can only applaud
those who escaped. Had the Allies shown a like wit, resisting
panic and withholding their fire, no one would have died.
Thats crap, I said. The Japs left mines and b-booby
traps behind. The newspaper said over a hundred men on the
destroyer Abner Read were hurt or drowned when their ship hit a
mine. How could Henry side with the lousy Japs?
Henry said nothing.
Dunnagin leaned over our seat back. Howd they manage
to get away so clean? The Japs?
Alaskan foesAleutian fogsswirl and deceive,
Henry said. The Japanese used them, and the capriciousness
of fate, to avert many deaths.
You mean they got lucky, Dunnagin said.
Perhaps everyone got lucky.
Cept them poor guys on the Abner Read and the
d-dogfaces blown to srn-smithereens by b-b-booby traps!
Henry grunted. The war thatd once appalled, now just
seemed to bore him. He let his head loll against the window
again, where it was buffeted by Sudikoffs herky-jerky driving
and maybe by troubling thoughts of Miss Giselle. No wonder
he couldnt hold the war on a front burner.
Three seats ahead of us, Bebout leapt up and had some
sort of weird schizo fit. Waving one arm, he baptized everyone
around him with spastic finger flicks, like a holy-roller on
speed.
Norman! he yelled. NORMAN!
Sudikoff was driving. What? he shouted back. What?
Bebout went into a long nonsensical spiel about the angel
Gabriel and his brother Woodrow and who-knows-what-else?
Id never heard anything like it.
Sudikoff said, Caint yall git that joker to shuddup? If
you dont, Im like to have a accident.
Mister JayMac came back to Bebout, put an arm around
him, and eventually got him quieted down.
The guys a walking Looney Toon, Curriden said. I
think hes snapped.
Bebout rested easy the last thirty miles of our ridebut
in Lanett, getting off the Bomber, he dumped a tin of
Wedowee Snuff into Larnar Knowless shirt pocket and patted
it, like a mama giving her son a fresh handkerchief. Lamar took
it as a joke, thank God, and the incident blew over.
Still, a lot of us worried Bebout would have one of his
spells during a game. Thank goodness, though, a ballpark and
playing ball seemed to calm and invigorate him at the same
timeand, except for Henry, he played as well as any of the
rest of us against the Linenmakers.
On Thursday and Friday evenings, despite
a lot of noisy support from the Lanett crowds, the
Linenmakers couldnt stay with us. We beat them seven to two and
thirteen to zip. Henry had three home runs in the serieshis
concentration during this road trip rarely falteredand
twelve RBIs. He now had thirty-nine homers on the year and
led his nearest competitor in that departmentLon Musselwhite,
who had a solo shot on Fridayby a dozen and a
half.
Given that the CVL season had only half the number of
games played by the majors, Henry had a better home-run
percentage than Ruthd had in his top three seasons with the
Yankees. In the bigs, with the same homer percentage hed had
in Highbridge, Henry wouldve hit eighty-two! Even Lanetts
fans cheered when the third of his blasts sailed over the
right-field wall into an egret-lined branch of the Chattahoochee.
In the same series, I did okay myselfseven hits in eight
at bats. Every time Henry walloped a fence-clearer, I trotted
home ahead of him. In fact, all of us feasted on Linenmaker
pitching, and when we left on Saturday morning for Opelika,
we rolled out with a certain greedy regret. Our second victory
in Lanett, coupled with a rare Gendarme loss to the Boll
Weevils, had lifted us into another first-place tie.
Lou Ed Dew, manager of the Orphans, had his team
loaded for Hellbender. Theyd dropped six games back and
could finish in a tie for first only if they won all six of their
remaining games while we and the Gendarmes booted ours. In
other words, the Orphans had no chancewe concluded our
season with three home games against LaGrange. Either the
Hellbenders or the Gendarmes would win the pennant. The
Orphans still had a shot at second, though, and a chance to
scuttle our dreams before we returned home. Lou Ed Dew
meant to scuttle em.
That weekend seriesa doubleheader on Saturday and a
singleton on Sunday afternoonturned prickly as soon as the
Orphans ace, Smiley Clough, took the mound. He threw high
and tight at least once a batsman, a whistling low-bridger
loosed with an oops-I-didnt-mean-to-do-that smirk. You
didnt know whether to go after Clough with your bat or to
sympathize with his control problems. Time we realized he
needed his skull cracked and his smirk rubbed south, Clough
had a deuce-to-zip lead and a breaking ball Nutter swore took
its unhittable kink from a smear of KY jelly. Whatever,
Clough went the full nine innings and shut us out.
The second game of the twin bill didnt go much better.
Dew had scared up a gangleshanks kid from the Florida
pan-handle to pitch for him, a kid named Marion Root. Root
threw a sidearm speedball that shrunk a fraction of an inch for
every foot it covered to the plate. By the time it reached us, it
looked like a petrified hummingbirds egg.
ROOT FOR ROOT said a banner in the outfield. Orphan
fans did, and he carried a two-hitter into the ninth.
Luckily, sod our own sodbuster ace, Fadeaway Ankers,
and in our last bat before extra innings, Henry polewhacked a
Root hummingbird egg all the way to Sea Island, scoring himself
and Worthy Bebout, whod taken a sidearm fastball in the
ribs swinging for the bleachers. We held on in the bottom half
of the inning for a two-to-goose-egg win. The split kept us in
a tie for first with LaGrange.
That night Henry told me Marion Rootd go up to the
bigs. Not only that, Henry said, but Root would make a reputation
for himself the equal of Bob Fellers or Johnny Vander
Meers. Not long after hed pitched against us, though, Root
reported for induction into the Army and spent the next seventeen
weeks at the Infantry Replacement Center at Camp
Wheeler near Augusta. He died the next winter at Anzio with
the U.S. 45th Division, two weeks after going overseas.
Sundays game against Opelika deserves no commemoration.
We lost it. The score was sixteen to three, and none of
our runs was earned. No excusesthe Orphans wrapped,
waxed, and shellacked us.
One truly screwy thing did happen in the bottom of the
eighth. On an easy liner to center, Bebout cried, Woodrow!
Woodrow, you take it! and dropped to his knees. The ball
carried over Bebouts head, allowing two runners to score and
the hitter to reach third as Skinny hurried to chase it down.
What the hell was that? Curriden yelled at Bebout.
He missed it! Bebout shouted. My sorry brother flat-out
missed it!
Amazingly, the Gendarmes lost to the
Eufaula Mudcats in the Prefecture. The entire season, then,
boiled down to our final three games against them at McKissic
Field.
Almost every day the Herald featured
the Hellbenders in the right-hand column on its sports page.
Once they ran a photo of memy bleached-out face and chest
above the inky smudge of my knickerbockersunder the headline
Tenkiller Speedster Hopes to Help / Our Hellbenders
Lug the Bunting.
A husky spinster lady who used the byline O. A. Drummond
had written the piece, with more appeal to front-office
press releases than to interviews or personal reporting. You
often saw Miz Drummond at the stadium, dressed, even in the
dog-days humidity and glare, like a fox-hunting freak: knee-high
boots, tweed skirt, puff-sleeved blouse, snap-brim tweed
hat. She never visited the clubhousethe Hellbenders
wouldve hooted her out in a skinks eyeblinkbut always sat
at a typewriter in the press box, three chairs from Milt Frye.
Anyway, Id sent a copy of Miz Drummonds story to
Mama and folded another copy into my wallet as a pick-me-up
after a poor performance. Not long after getting my vocal
cords back, Id gone to Double Dunnagin with my ratty clipping
and showed it to him.
Whattuz l-l-lug the b-b-bunting m-mean?
To win the pennant, kid.
So why d-didnt sh-she say s-s-so?
Cause shes a writer and lug the buntings more poetic
You oughta be asking Sloan.
By the end of August, though, wed put ourselves in a
place to lug the bunting, for real, and Miz Drummonds daily
squib for the Herald was plugging the final LaGrange series like
the next Joe Louis bouttwice on the front page, next to wire
reports about U. S. naval operations around New Guinea and
the Solomons. Highbridge had pennant fever. If FDR wanted
the CVL and Mister JayMacs club to boost the morale of our
locals, well, we were doing a bang-up job. Even a runt like
Trapdoor Evansspeaking talentwisecouldnt walk through
the farmers market without drawing autograph hounds.
Henry didnt borrow Mister JayMacs Caddy on any of
our off days leading up to Fridays game. Far as I could tell, he
didnt once rendezvous in the victory garden or in Dariuss old
room with Miss Giselle. He slept in his own bed, getting six or
seven hours of shuteye a night. He read two very brainy books Anatole
Maguins The Pariah and Victor-René Durastantes
Self-Evolution and Self-Extinguishment. (I jotted the titles down in
my notebook.) Hed focus on two pages at once, close his eyes like
a camera shutter, and then page forward againa method I
hadnt seen him use before, like maybe he wanted to speed up
his reading to beat the end of the season.
Those any g-good? I asked him about his books.
Provocative. I wish I had them in the original French,
but Mrs Hocking could get them only in these somewhat
clumsy translations. He finished the shorter bookthe
Maguinin an hour, but spent most of one afternoon on the
Durastante.
What Henry did Thursday and Friday, I dont know. I
took Phoebe to a matinee at the Exotic on Thursday (Above
Suspicion with Joan Crawford and Fred MacMurray) and spent
my entire Fridayuntil going to the ballparkclerking with
her at Hitch & Shirleens.
We didnt moon over each other, or try to smooch, or
even spend much time holding hands. We just hung around
and talked, or hung around and didnt talk, and that horrible
morning in her house over to Cotton Creek fell further into
our pasts, like itd happened in 38 to somebody else. When
Phoebe had to wait on a customer or ring up a sale, I sat on a
stool behind the counter and struggled to read The Pariah.
That any good, Ichabod?
I d-dunno. Not much happens. This Frenchie in Senegal
lives for a year in the basement of a government b-b-building,
and nobody knows hes there. Ord c-care if they did.
Sounds a lot like Mr Bebout.
Henry l-liked it.
Well, Henrys a genius. A certified aigghead.
What could I say to that?
Hes the nicest ugly man I ever knew, Phoebe said. But
put up that stupid book and talk to me.
So I did.
No one could say Buck Hoeyd fueled a
late-season surge by the Gendarmes because theyd played well
all season. On the other hand, Hoey almost singlehandedly kept the
Darmes juices flowing in Augustby his bullyragging,
drive, and sheer revengeful orneriness. He wanted his new
club to beat his old club so bad Emmett Strock wouldve had
to shoot him to keep him off the field. In fact, the
Hoey-for-Fortenberry-plus-cash trade quickly began to look like the
worst player swap Mister JayMacd ever engineered.
You see, Strock put Hoey on third base, for Binkie Lister,
where he didnt have to cover so much infield as he did at
short. That move, along with Hoeys natural grit and his ill
will towards his former boss, gave him the energy to raise his
batting average sixty points. He also began using what he knew
about the windups and body talk of CVL pitchers to steal
bases (not really like him) and his Durocherlike talent for
hurling insults to gig rival batters from his spot at third (exactly
his style). He got under the skin of hitters, who rewarded
his obnoxiousness by losing their cool and wasting their at
bats. As a result (we heard), the same Buck Hoey whod once
launched a barrage of Burma-Shave jars in the Prefecture had
become the darling of LaGrange. Even Binkie Lister, reduced
to a backup role, liked Hoey; and Cliff Nugent, the Darmes
biggest star, recognized Hoeys value and didnt begrudge him
his popularity.
Luckily, we had the Gendarmes at McKissic Field, where,
what with the neck-to-neckness of the pennant race and all the
rabble-rousing feature stories about us in the Herald, we also
had a sellout. An oversell, in fact.
I dressed out in a stock room at Hitch & Shirleens,
across the shady street from the ballpark. Fans began to arrive
four or five hours before the games scheduled 7:30 P.M. starting
time. Whites and coloreds, GIs and civs, occupied the
stadium like a celebrating army.
Some of these folks spilled into Hitch & Shirleens looking
for Co-Colas, sweet cakes, chewing gum, tater chips, you
name it, at cheaper prices than theyd get them for at the
stadiums concession stands. Phoebes daddys folks returned
to help her handle the extra customers, and I walked across the
busy street on my spikes for our pregame meeting at six-thirty.
Autograph seekers and advice givers orbited me like gnats. It
took fifteen minutes to cover a hundred yards, and I heard
some fans from LaGrange grousing that ticketsellers at a
couple of gates had turned them away.
F yall want to see this one, a man said, we may have to
buy some nigger seats, its all thats left.
Inside, the stadium seemed tove inflated like a balloon. It
creaked and wobbled and bulged. And our het-up Hellbender
crowd carried us through that killer series opener, boosting us
to a foot-stamping win. Nutter hurled a tidy five-hitter, and
Henry blasted a seventh-inning home run that mayve come
down in the Himalayas, with Yours Truly on board by way of a
bunt single. Hoey didnt do diddly in the game. On my trot
towards third base, I didnt even look at him.
Nother pissant hit, I heard him say. He meant my
bunt, not Henrys homer, but I said, Too bad it cleared the
fence, and jogged home with the only score that really mattered
in that game. Behind me, Hoey chewed his vinegary cud.
An inning and a half later, when I stabbed a liner to my
right for the games final out, fans poured onto the field, and a
brigade of GIs marched to Penticuff Strip singing Take Me
Out to the Ballgame and so many off-color jody chants that
fistfights with offended Good Ol Boys broke out.
The win put us a full game up, with only two to play.
In the clubhouse, Mister JayMac said, Win tomorrow,
and thats it. Except for our honor, I wouldnt much care if yall
shanked Sundays game. The Darmes could take their cheap
win and ride home crying.
Amen! said Jerry Wayne Sosebee.
So win tomorrow and wrap er all up.
Win tomorry! everybody shouted. Win tomorry!
Mister JayMac collared me on my way to the showers and
dragged me over to Henry. Yall meet me out to the gazebo
exactly an hour from now, hear?
Yessir, we both said. Mister JayMac vanished into the
echoey pandemonium of the understands. Henry and I looked
at each other. Then Henry ducked out of the locker room in
his uniformto walk back to McKissic House.
Gentlemen, jes a few minutes of your
time. Mister JayMac paced the springy flooring of his gazebo
on Hellbender Pond while Henry and I sat next to each other
on a bench against one of its walls. Mosquitoes whined, and
ghostly patches of steam rose from the smoky mirror of the
water, the stars overhead as sharp as buffed-up fork tines.
Does either of yall have any idea what Im about to say?
Sir Henry began.
Hold on now. Actually, you see, Id prefer to break the
news, even if you have a hunch about it, Mr Clerval.
Henryd gone stiff as a cigar-store Indian. His hip next to
mine felt like a curved plank of hickory. He feared, I suddenly
realized, Mister JayMac had heard from Miss Giselles own
mouth the damnable story of their affaire de coeur, and other
body parts. Henry had a hand on one knee, and that hand
began to twitchthe only movement except for his breathing
Id noticed so far. Me, I suspected a wholly different reason for
our interview with Mister JayMac.
Few would admit you fellas are a sight for sore eyes, he
said, but yallve been that to meeven if sometimes I rode
you damnably hard and put you up wet.
Kizzy keeps us in fresh towels, Henry said.
Mister JayMac raised an eyebrow. Listen. The Phils
want yall for the rest of this season. Freddy Fitzsimmons prevailed
upon Mr Cox to get him some top-notch help from the
minors, and the help he wanted was a coupla fellas from this
lowly Class C organization. Yallll catch a train out of Highbridge
on Tuesday and report to the Phillies soon as you get
there, likely for some serious playing time.
Hot dog! I said. Hot diggety dog!
Great joy. Henry gripped his knee to keep his hand
from twitching. Great, unexpected joy.
Unexpected? Henry, a man with forty-plus homers
should be asking what kept him stuck at this level until now.
Henry said, Very well. What did?
I did. The Phils werent going nowhere, but we looked
to be. God forgive me, Mr Clerval, but I kept you here. I made
Fitzsimmons cool his heels.
Then God forgive you indeed.
Yall could even start. Jimmy Wasdell, Phillys first baseman,
has only two or three homers all year, and Gabby Stewarts
hitting about .200 and trading out at shortstop with
Charlie Brewster, no Ruch himself. In other words, yall could
actually claim those starting spots.
Hot dog! I got up and did a jig. When Id finished,
Mister JayMac looked out across the pond.
Dont know what Ill do to replace you next year, but
yallre on your way. The Phillies may be too. Jes dont forget
who gave you your shot when you start exercising the
scoreboard riggers at Shibe Park. Mister JayMac stumped
down the steps, as if to hike across the lawn to his bungalow.
Sir! Henry said.
Mister JayMac turned around.
Why did you apprise us of our promotions tonight?
Mister JayMac said, You mean, before weve clinched? I
guess its because I can never deny myself any small pleasure. I
like my dessert first. I flip to the back of murder stories to see
who done it. A long-standing vice.
If we dont clinch tomorrow, Henry said, you will
berate yourself for breaking the news so soon.
Probably. Almost certainly.
Then make no general announcement until the pennant
is in our grasp. Danny and I will remain discreet as well.
Excellent, Mister JayMac said. Yall get some sleep.
He angled away from us, a shadow in rumpled seersucker.
Frogs croaked, fireflies blinked, and the smell of scorched
peanuts drifted through the gazebo, oiling the hot night and the
steamy surface of the water.
A dream fulfilled, Henry said thoughtfully. A chance
to prove myself against the best.
I pulled Henry off the bench by his shirt front. He had
to duck his head to keep from bumping it. B-big leaguers, I
said. You and me.
Henry lifted me to his chest, squeezed my puny bones. In
that cockeyed bandbox, he solemnly waltzed me around, swinging
me a foot or so off the floor, wagging me like the bob in a
grandfather clock. He smelled of soap, rubbed baseballs, and
wet clay. I let him drag-waltz me, step-step, step-step, frogs
and cicadas chorusing like bullroarers and pennywhistles. At
last Henry put me down.
Hed have t-to admit I could p-pl-play, I said.
Who? Then Henry understood and laid his hand on
my head like a priest giving a blessing.
Miss Giselle stood at the foot of the
gazebos steps, a phantom in a pale organdy gown, white or
trout-fin blue. Maybe it was a dressing-gown, maybe her
thirty-year-old ballroom getup. Anyway, I sort of boggled. A
damped-down glowworm sheen seeped from her. The helmet
of her silvery hair shone dully too. She looked old, Miss
Giselle didnot old-old, in face and body, but like shed been
shipped forward to us from a temple in Thebes, say.
Congratulations, Henry.
Henry nodded a wary thank-you.
Up to Philadelphia, away from Highbridge.
Im g-g-goin. Good night.
Stay here, Daniel, Miss Giselle said. Who knows what
Ill do if you leave?
Go in, Giselle, Henry said. Its late. The air feels
humid and plaguey.
Plaguey. Only youd say plaguey and mean what you
mean, but the airs just fine. I like it.
Giselle, this charade must not persist.
If you leave, I leave too. I see no charade, but a union
that only days ago you also believed in.
Woman, please, we do ourselves no glory, protracting
this deception, indulging what cannot be.
Ha. Miss Giselle quoted from a book that Henry
knew: Everywhere I see bliss, from which I alone am
irrevocably excluded.
You say a lie, as once I ignorantly lied to myself. The
truth is that bliss eludes the mass of us. Go back in.
Get me to a nunnery, eh? And how have you come to regard yourself as
one of us? The mass of us? Youre a
murderer, Henry. Hells tortures are too mild for this . . .
sniveling rejection you shy at me, you wretched devil!
Henry sat down again. Dont, he said, so softly it was
almost a message to himself. Whence did I come? What is my
destination?
Philadelphia, Miss Giselle mocked. Say were finishedmince
no wordsand Ill go inside. Youll never lay eyes on
me again. Just look me in the face and say it.
That painful act Ive already accomplished.
If you meant it, you can do it again.
Henry sadly shook his head. Our furtive meetings must
cease. You may not accompany me when I leave.
Then youve slain me, Henry. Slain me.
Henrys face was so moony white it seemed to reflect the
trout-fin blue of Miss Giselles gown. Miss Giselle sent him a
bitter kiss off the back of her hand and pivoted in the shadowy
grass. Henry watched her stride away.
Fornicationfilth and incest. Henry didnt mean to be
funny, and I couldnt laugh at him because his whole body had
shaken with the blurting of those curses.
Whatll she do? I asked him.
His very skin sagged on him. Forget me. Devote herself
anew to the licensed desiderata of her husband.
I didnt know what that meant, but the grief in Henrys
voice was plain enough. It quirked my own upbeat mood about
our call-up. When we returned to McKissic House, his
slumped shoulders vexed me every step of the way. I wanted to
do a maypole dance around him. Instead I dragged myself to
bed, in a house already dark and snore-riven. And Henry paid
no heed to Christs advice to set all anxiety aside.
On Saturday, the Gendarmes humiliated us. I dont remember the score, and Ive struggled for years to forget my two muffs at shortstop. Buck Hoey led the charge against us, with four hits in five tries and an incredible catch in the eighth of a real stinger off the bat of Worthy Bebout. Hoeys catch killed our only feeble whack at a rally.
Tied, Mister JayMac told us, like we
didnt know wed bungled our chance to coast. Any need to
explain what yallll have to do tomorrow, gentlemen?
Excel or expire, Manani said. Put up or perish.
Cripes, Turkey Sloan said. Knock it off, Vito.
Suck it in or succumb. Manani caught Sloans gaze and
held it like a carrier gunner lining up a Zero in his cross hairs.
Do or die.
Suddenly, Do or die no longer struck even Turkey
Sloan as the hackneyed saw of a low-grade dago brain.
On Sunday afternoon, the Gendarmes
played us tough again. Their ace, Sundog Billy Wallace, dueled
our rookie star, Fadeaway Ankers. Neither had his best stuff,
but Wallace was always a scrapper and Fadeawayd learned
from Dunnagin how to pitch when his speedball had taken a
holiday. By the middle of the fourth, the scoreboard read three
to three.
Buck Hoeyd picked up right where hed finished yesterdays
game. Nothing existed for him but himself, the ball, the
bases, and the base paths. He didnt bullyrag or chatter, he just
centered himself and played.
In the top of the fifth, at first again on his third single of
the day, Hoey took a crouching lead, broke on Fadeaways
move to the plate, and geysered up out of his slide, after
hooking around my tag, in a swirl of red dust. He called time
to brush himself off, and when he did, I touched him on the
hip with the web of my glove, a half-hearted effort to get
the base ump to throw a thumb at him. No go. Because of the
timeout, the fact Hoey stood off the bag slapping red-orange
dust from his pants didnt mean cracklin bread.
My meaningless tag got Hoeys attention, though. He
cocked awake and jabbed me in the gut with his finger.
Uh-uh-uh, said the base ump, Little Cuke Gordon.
Hands to yoresef, Hoey.
S just a love poke. Only one Dumbos gotten all season.
Less, of course, Jumbos buggering him.
Put a lid on it, Hoey, or clean it up.
Christ, Gordon, you sound like a bluenose. Hoey returned
to second. And, Dumbo, you poor gazoonie, he said,
kicking some dirt at me with the side of his shoe, tell Mister
JayMac he lost Highbridge a pennant the day he dealt me. Tell
him it was a damned stupid thing to do.
I flipped the ball back to Fadeaway and returned to my
spot at short. The only way to deal with an asshole, I thought,
was to wipe itwhich us Hellbenders intended to do on the
field. Hoey, meanwhile, tunneled into himself again, taking his
lead, daring Fadeaway to pick him off. No need. The next
hitter up fouled out to Curriden, ending the inning.
Later, during the seventh-inning stretch, with our organist
playing a medley of show tunes and Cokesbury hymns, Milt
Frye spoke out over the PA system: S a great time to visit our
concession stands. Slaw dogs, nickel Co-Cola, boiled peanuts, and, one of
yalls favorites, Cracker Jacks. Patriotic Cracker Jacksa
prize in ever box, not a one made in Japan. . . .
Ive jes got some big news for immediate release.
Namely, two of our worthiest Bendersthough I dont mean
Mr Bebouthave earned train tickets to Canaan. Yessir.
Come Tuesday, Jumbo Hank Clerval and Battlin Danny Boles
will be bona fide big leaguers. The Phils need help, and these
fellasre gonna go up to provide it. We know what they can do.
Now them pitiful long-sufferers in the City of Brotherly
Lovere gonna find out too.
Whadda. Yall. Think. Bout. That?
Nearly everybody on hand went loopy. Cow bells. Hooting.
Clapping. Ooga horns. Youdve thought FDRd just announced
the unconditional surrender of Hitler and Tojo.
In our dugout, Henry peered gloomily down the bench at
Mister JayMac. Who chose this ill-timed moment to divulge
our good fortune?
It wasnt I, Mister JayMac said.
Atta way a go! Lamar Knowles told Henry and me. I
knew it. Didnt I tell you, Danny? Didnt I?
Several other guys, including even Sosebee and Evans,
came over to congratulate us.
The crowd rioted in place. Pretty soon we could hear it
chanting, Jumbo and Dumbo! Send em out PRONTO!
Henry waved his arm in disgust. The crowdd seemed
tove forgotten the game in the hullabaloo of Fryes announcement,
and the Gendarmes had another reason, like they needed
it, to come after us like rabid badgers.
Hush em up! Mister JayMac shouted down the bench
at Henry and me. Get out there and tip your caps!
Henry and I, the Mutt and Jeff of the CVL, clambered
onto the field to greet the misplaced huzzas of our fans. We
tipped our caps. The fans stamped their feet, whistled, or
stood to cheer. From their own dugout or their places on the
field, the Gendarmes squinted and frowned.
Henry raised his arms. ENOUGH! His bellow silenced
the crowd. We have work yet to do! This display bids
fair to undo our enterprise! He put his cap back on and
galumphed grimly back to our dugout, with me more or less in
tow and the crowd stunned into mass catatonia.
Great, Mister JayMac said, scowling. Jes great.
Loose lips sink ships, Henry said. But no one in this
organization could see that prophylactic slogans application to
the situation here.
I didnt authorize the announcement, Mister JayMac
said. He called Euclid over. Go up there and ask Mr Frye
who told him about the call-up. You got me?
Yessuh. Euclid shot out of the dugout and hustled up
the steps to the press box.
Cmon! Mister JayMac yelled. Draw a line under what
Milt Frye jes blabbed to the world! Grab the flag!
So happened, Henry had the lead-off spot against Sundog
Billy in the bottom of the seventh. First pitch, he smacked
it like a Bobby Jones tee shot. The snap of his bat was like a
molar cracking on a jawbreaker. Everybody rose, even us guys
in the dugout. If this was a balata ball, a big league cull,
Henryd just launched it into low earth orbit, a pre-Sputnik
Sputnik.
The score stood four to three, Hellbenders.
Curriden fanned, as Wallace bore down. Heggie one-hopped
a nubber to the second baseman for our second out.
Euclid came back into the dugout. Henry buttonholed him
even before Mister JayMac could get over to him.
And what did you discover?
What did Mr Frye say? Mister JayMac chimed in.
Euclid stood dwarfed by the two men. He kept his eyes
on the tobacco-stained concrete floor.
Speak up, Euclid! Mister JayMac said.
Say Miz Giselle tol him, Euclid whispered.
Holy fire! Howd she even know?
She overheard, Henry said. And this is my recompense.
Your what?
Henry waved off the question and sat back down next to
me as Euclid slunk back to his own roost next to Bebout.
Dunnagin ended the inning by skying a hard-hit but shallow fly
to Nugent in center. We had a one-run lead and two more
Gendarme at bats to survive. We survived the first un, but
couldnt up our lead in our own trip to town.
In the top of the ninth, Fadeaway suckered Jim Keating, a
pinch hitter for Wallace, on a third-strike sinker into the dirt.
Dunnagin trapped it with his mitt and swiped it across Keatings
backside for a quick-thinking assist on the putout. One
down. Two outs to the CVL championship. The crowd
sounded like the ocean in a hurricane swell.
Buck Hoey came to the plate. Bingo! A blue darter into
left center, right over my head. Hoey rounded first like he had
it in mind to keep on coming. Musselwhite rifled the ball in to
me, though, and Hoey retreated to first, mumbling something
that got a weird grin from Henry, a half-innocent, half-psycho
grin.
Nugent came up. He hadnt had a good night, but he led
Strocks boys in hitting, with an average approaching .330. I
expected Mister JayMac to signal Fadeaway to walk him, to get
to the slumping Jed Balmore, LaGranges second baseman, but
Mister JayMac refused to put the go-ahead run on base this
late in the game. He wristed a paint-brushing gesture at Fadeaway,
a sign to paint the plates cornersto give Nugent nothing
in the fat of the strike zone.
Craftily, Nugent worked the count to three and two. He
fouled off four pitches that plate umpire Grayson DoverMister
JayMacd pulled strings to keep Polidori out of this
seriesmightve retired Nugent on, otherwise. Then, Fadeaways
tenth pitch, Nugent hit a low, twisting shot at Junior
between first and second, almost on the outfield grass.
On the pitch, Hoeyd broken for second. He had to leap
Nugents ground-hugger to avoid putting himself out, but his
skip step didnt slow him. As I ran to cover second, Junior
bobbled the roller, got his grip again, and whipped a sidearm
throw towards second in the hope, the near certainty, Id get
there in time to catch it, toe-kick the bag, and fire to Henry for
a game-ending double-play.
Junior-to-Dumbo-to-Jumbo. A riff on the famous
Dumbo-to-Junior-to-Jumbo combo.
Hoey was barreling. I picked off Juniors stinger at belt
height. Hoey slammed the dirt and slid towards me feet first,
cleats high. His spikes looked big, a grizzys fangs ready to tear.
When I kicked second, one of Hoeys shoes bit me in the groin
and ripped into my left inner thigh. I began to fall. Little Cuke
Gordond planted himself to see the force, and he twisted his
face as he thumbed Hoey out. Falling, I sidearmed the ball to
Henry as hard as I could and watched in agony as his glove
hand reached damn-near halfway down the base path to meet
it. His right leg strained back towards first to close the
double-play circuit.
An instant before Nugents foot hit the bag, the ball went
thwack! in Henrys mitt, and Little Cuke threw his arm up in
another show-boaty gotcha! Even face-down in the clay, I had to
admire the guys dramatic flair.
The game was over. The Hellbendersmy Hellbendershad
won. Our fans bounced up and down, do-si-dod in the
aisles, yodeled rebel yells, howled like wolves.
Then I stopped noticing because every
part of me below my waist on my left leg seemed tove caught
fire. I rolled to my back. It wasnt quite five in the afternoon,
but the sky looked black and I saw stadiums lights blazing
against that blackness, two dozen or so tall fuzzy haloes,
shrinking and bloating. Stars swam into the blackness between
the haloes, and my head bloated along with them, like someoned
jammed a hissing air hose into my ear. The fire in my leg
got hotter, my skin crisped like a burning paper sack, a mayhem
of fluids seeped into the clay.
Buck Hoeys face blocked the haloes and the stars. Nice
play, Dumbo. A pair of baseball shoes fell out of the sky and
bounced on my stomach. Wear these in the bigs, kid. If you
ever really get there.
Hoey vanished.
Where Hoeyd stood, the sky ran afternoon blue again. I
pushed the shoes off my belly and doubled over, clutching my
leg and making a noise that opened into a scream. Or maybe I
didnt scream, for some of our fansGIs, teenagers, feisty
little boyshad scrambled onto the field to run about waving
caps and souvenir pennants. They swung one another around
like square dancers. None of them seemed to hear me. The
National Anthem played scratchily, blaring through the PA
system, but I guess nobody could hear it either. Junior Heggie
knelt beside me, with Henry right behind him, and then, better
late than never, Mister JayMac showeddogged, I imagine, by
memories of Charlie Snows last day.
Daniel! Mister JayMac cried. Daniel, can you stand?
Uh-uh. I thought maybe I was screaming againa
scream ricocheted between my earsbut Henry waved his arm
at somebody near the clubhouse.
A canvas litter for Daniel! he shouted. Immediately!
I passed outinto dry-ice fog and a field of parka-clad
ballplayers frozen against the brittle light pulsing without letup
through the grayness.
Not until the next morning did I come around.
I lay flat-out in bed in a private room in the Hothlepoya
County Hospital. A private room meant Mister JayMac, using
his political clout and the full power of his checkbook, had
sprung for my treatment with almost everything he had to
spring with. Charlie Snowd died on him. Danny Boles
wouldnt.
A bearded man in a white lab coat introduced himself to
me as Dr Nesheim. He straddled a chair next to my bed, his
arms on the chair back and his chin on his clasped hands.
Woozy? Take your time. Youve got beaucoups of time.
Buck Hoey, I learned, had done for me. With one set of
spikes, hed shattered my right kneecap; with the other, torn
the muscles of my left inner thigh. Then, throwing to Henry,
Id fallen, and fallen wrong, and done something very, very bad
to my hip.
Want me to sweeten the news for you, son, or would you
rather take it all in one nasty gulp?
One nasty gulp? How much more nastiness did this man
want me to gag down?
Even so, I said, One nasty gulp.
The orthopedic details of your injuries probably dont
matter much to you right now, Dr Nesheim said. But theyre
severe.
How severe?
You wont be able to play ball again.
Our seasons over. What about next year?
Not likely, Danny. That fella who spiked you, hes
pretty much undercut your hopes of fame in the majors. Rehabilitation
is going to be long, painful, and . . . well, incomplete.
Im a ballplayer! A shortstop! Thats what I am!
That was something you did, son. Now youre going to
have to redefine yourself in quite different terms.
Im a ballplayer, I said.
Dr Nesheim said, The only consolation I can give youif
it will consoleis, you wont have to worry about the
draft or going off to war. Not as a dogface or swabbie, anyway.
Uncle Sam wont want you any more than the Phillies do.
I was two and a half months shy of eighteen. I put my
arm over my face and cried. Dr Nesheim patted me on the
arm and left. I didnt fault him. He seemed a decent enough
joehed given it to me in one nasty gulp, a dose of Epsom
salts for the only life plan Id ever made for myself. I didnt
believe I couldnt use that plan anymore . . . and I did believe.
The way my lower body felt like a sack full of broken glass told
me all I needed to know about the reliability of Dr Nesheims
prognosis.
Hoeyd gotten back at me for beating him out at shortstop,
for taking away a pair of his baseball shoes, for my role in
his ejection from a big game in LaGrange, and for greasing the
duckboards of his late-season trade to the Gendarmes. Yessir,
hed decommissioned my wagon.
I spent the last two days of August and
most of September in the Hothlepoya County Hospital. Between
them, the Hellbenders and the Phillies paid for my stay.
Mama and I couldve never managed the bills. Deck Glider,
Inc., had no medical plan for its line workers and mid-level
managers, and even with a bonus for helping Mister JayMacs
club to the CVL pennant, I hadnt cleared half a grand that
summer.
During my first two days in the hospital, everyone on the
team, except Henry and Mister JayMac, visited me. Even Trapdoor
Evans and Turkey Sloan came bywith Sosebee, Ankers,
and Sudikoffto wish me a fast recovery and to laud me for
turning the last double play of the year. Henry hadnt come, I
figured, because hed had to report to the Phillies, and their
front officed wired him money for a tram ticket, probably in a
first-class Pullman. No one else told me differentnot at first
anyways.
The visitor I most appreciated on Monday, though, was
Phoebe. She came late in the day with Miss LaRaina, bringing
a small box of Baby Ruth candy bars, a bouquet of crape
myrtle and hydrangeas, and several tattered Saturday Evening Posts.
Miss LaRaina sat subduedalmost primby my bed, but
Phoebe twirled a finger in a stray lock on my forehead and
smoothed back the hair at my temples.
How you feelin, Ichabod?
Rotten. Howm I sposed to feel?
With yore fingers, or yore toes, or yore nose. Or
yore . . . whatever.
Phoebe, Miss LaRaina said tiredly.
Mamas doing better, guy. Shes seeing this really sweet
Army nutpick out to the camp.
Nutpick?
Phoebe, Miss LaRaina said again.
Well, hes helped, yore kindly dome doctor has. Hes got
you to relax, to think some bout Daddy n me, to spend a little
time to home.
I never didnt think about yall, Phoebe. But I suppose I
did think about myself more, and the terrible unfairness of my
place in this dreadful war.
Terrible unfairness.
But Danny doesnt want to hear this, Miss LaRaina
said. We came to be mood lifters, angels of mercy, not a tear-jerker
episode of Captain Pharrams Family. She tapped a
cigarette from a pack of Luckies. Mind if I smoke, Danny?
Keeps my hands busy and sort of rebraids my frazzled nerves.
Not if I can have one too, I told her.
Phoebe took a cigarette from her mother, stuck it
between my lips, lit me up. I bathed my lungs in smoke and blew
out a whole stack of wobbly airborne doughnuts. The quick
high the smoke gave methe sensation of floatinglifted my
mind away from the throb in my hip, the burn in my groin.
Tobacco, the opium of the people.
How come Mister JayMac aint been by?
The silence spilling from Phoebe and her mama came
down in deafening Niagara Falls torrents.
How many top-heavy nurses been in here to jab needles
in yore butt? Phoebe suddenly asked me.
Five or six. They cant stay away. I lose count.
Phoebe, Miss LaRaina said tiredly.
Oh, cmon, Mama. Yore doctor said to behave responsibly,
not to chain yoresef to a church pew.
Phoebe, Id appreciate it if
I blew a smoke ring and cut Miss LaRaina off. How
come Mister JayMac hasnt visited me?
Phoebe and her mama did that hurry-not-to-answer thing
theyd already done once. Like Mariani coiling a spaghetti
strand around a fork tine, Phoebe spiraled my forelock around
her finger. The ash on Miss LaRainas cigarette, meanwhile,
grew like Pinocchios nose. This time I waited.
Weve all suffered an unexpected loss, Miss LaRaina
said. You see, Miss Giselle is dead. She died either quite late
last night or very early this morning.
Cripes. Did Mister JayMac shoot her? (For telling Frye
to announce our call-up? For going the carnal hanky-panky
route with Henry? And, if the second, how had Mister JayMac
found out?)
Uh-uh, Phoebe said. Miss Giselle kilt herself.
How? Why? I mayve known the answer to at least one
of those questions, but I needed to hear it said. No, I needed a
denial, a lie that didnt impeach my roommate. Now, too, I
began to understand the bouts of dumbness thatd fallen on
Phoebe and Miss LaRaina when I mentioned Miss Giselle or
asked about Mister JayMac. Someoned told them not to drop
any more bad news on me than Dr Nesheim already had.
What about Henry? Is Henry all right?
Another uh-oh look between Phoebe and her mama.
Whats happened to him? I demanded.
Hes fine, Miss LaRaina said quickly. Hes justfine.
Uh-uh, I said. Im owed some truth. Lets have it.
Listen to him, Mama, Phoebe said. Hes done got
shut of his stutter. Completely, nearlybout.
Phoebe, its either completely or it aint, I said.
Why, youre right, Miss LaRaina said. Hes become a
regular Demosthenian. They marveled over me.
Tell me whats happened to Henry, blast it.
Miss LaRaina said, Once he knew how bad Buck
Hoeyd hurt you, he left and got just sloppy drunk over it.
Yesterday was Sunday, I said. And Henry dont
drink.
Ordinarily, no, Miss LaRaina said, but this spiking
business unnerved him, and Ive never known a Hellbender
who wanted a bottle not to find one. ReeseMr Curridenalways
had two or three hidden in his room. Hed distribute
too. Hoardings not his way, even in a whiskey drought.
Mama, Phoebe said, looking at her feet.
Its all right, child. Major Blumlein said to own up to
my trespasses, not to cache them under a lamp-stand.
He didnt tell you to parade em in front of Daddy.
Your daddy isnt here. Miss LaRaina surveyed my
room. That young man there answers to Danny, not Daddy,
and I assume him chivalrous enough to keep his own counsel.
She blew smoke sidelong, holding her cigarette Bette Davis
style. Are you? she asked me.
Yessum.
Well, then. Henry sends his regrets.
Will he visit me before he leaves for Philly?
Thats probably up to him and the railway timetable.
Miss LaRaina smiled and took another sexy drag on the nub
of her Lucky. She caught a knuckles length of falling ash in
one palm and dumped it in the terra-cotta pot of crape myrtle
and hydrangea blossoms at her feet.
We talked another ten or fifteen minutes, mostly about
Miss Giselleher generosity, her loving-kindness, her
sacrifices for Mister JayMac and the Hellbenders. Then Miss
LaRaina said I looked peaked. She and Phoebe had better go.
The staff didnt want me overtaxed.
Then tell em to write their congressmen, I said. Look,
Im strong enough for yall to stay.
Not if we fuss, Miss LaRaina said. Fussinll lay you
down faster than a mile-long footrace.
Phoebe kissed me on the forehead. Ill be back. Ever day
till yore out.
I held Phoebes hand briefly before she slipped away, over
to the door. Miss LaRaina, leave me those cigarettes, okay?
You can get some more.
Miss LaRaina walked over and laid her pack on my stomach.
Whens the funeral? I asked her. When she just stared
at me, like shed forgotten an earlier part of our talk, I added,
Miss Giselles?
Oh. Tomorrow, at Alligator Park. A memorial service.
No burial. The bodys being cremated.
I cant go, I said. Id like to, but I I dropped my
cigarette butt in the water glass on my bedside table and
watched it fizzle and saturate. Miss Giselle dead. Henry not
accounted for. My career an injury-blasted memory. The
weight of all this wreckage squeezed tears from me. Okay. Yall
go on. Leave me be. I fumbled another cigarette out and got
Phoebe to light itto keep her from planting another wet
sympathy buss over my eye. She and Miss LaRaina went to the
door.
Matches! I called after them. Please.
Phoebe tossed them onto the bed, not really within easy
reach, and then I was alone again.
During September, every day until my release
on the twenty-seventh, Phoebe kept her word and came to
see me, usually in the afternoon after school. With the end of
the CVL season, though, visits from other Hellbenders dwindled
to one or two a week, for most of my teammates left
Highbridge for their own hometowns or farms, or rode away to
take winter-long defense jobs in shipyards, munitions factories,
and bomber plants. Nutter, Hay, Sloan, Sudikoff, and Fanning
stayed, with jobs at Foremost Forge or Highbridge Box &
Cratebut only Nutter ever actually dropped by, usually with
newspapers, his motor-mouthed five-year-old Carl, and a freshto
me, anywayanecdote about his days with the St. Louis
Browns.
Mister JayMac visited me on Sunday afternoons at three
oclock and stayed fifteen minutes, tops. He never mentioned
Miss Giselle, Darius, or Henry, but concentrated on asking
how I seemed to be healing up and second-guessing Allied
command decisions in Italy and the Solomons. By telephone,
of course, hed told Mama Laurel of my injuries, and of their
severity, without trying to soft-pedal the truth or to weasel out
of the clubs financial obligationseven though my contract
didnt say a word about insuring me for game-acquired or
aggravated hurts. Hedve paid Mama Laurels way to Highbridge,
but Mama told him tearfully in one call that coming to
see me might make her lose her job. Colonel Elshtain had
helped Deck Glider get its military conversion contract, but he
didnt seem to have any leftover pull with the management at
the Tenkiller factory, and Mama couldnt put her job up for
grabs by asking for an emergency leave of absence.
Then dont come, Mrs Boles, Mister JayMac told me
hed told Mama. Ill take care of Danny jes like he was my
own.
Imagine my gratitude.
Anyway, Mama and I also talked occasionally. I told her
to stay on the job and to pray for me. Ordinarily, we talked on
Sundays, after Mister JayMacs humdrum visits, when he sat in
a chair near the door, a black arm band on one sleeve and a
look of heavy confusion on his booze-swollen face. Sometimes
wed talk, Mama and I, while Mister JayMac, whod had the
phone brought in, sat nearby in his rumpled widowers weeds
and his deep-purple heartache.
Yessurn, theyre treating me just fine, Id say. Yessum,
he is. What else could I saythough it did pretty much tally
with the truthwith Mister JayMac sharing my room?
Nobody brought me a copy of the Highbridge Herald until
the Friday of my first week in the hospital. And when Nutter
came in with it, he brought me only the sports page, which had
a few major-league box scores and a whole section about a GI
track meet at Camp Penticuff. Id already read my Saturday
Evening Posts from cover to cover.
Wheres the rest of this rag? Nobody herell give me a
copy and you come in with a piddlin snippet.
Didnt think youd care about anything but the sports,
Nutter said. After ball season, nothing worth preserving in
type happens in this burg.
What happened at Miss Giselles funeral?
Memorial service. The usual. Blather, tears, you know.
Remember Charlie Snows. Only difference? Afterwards,
Mister JayMac took his ladys ashes home in an urn.
Oh. I changed the subject. Wheres Henry? He never
came to see me, but I look in these here box scores for the
PhilliesI snapped the sports page with my knucklesand
his name amt here. Where is he?
I dont know.
He didnt go up to the Phillies?
Maybe hes sitting on the bench. Not finding his name
in a box score only means he didnt play in that game.
I tacked about. Why doesnt Hoey come visit me? He
owes me that much, the jerk.
Cripes, Boles, youre a pigheaded case. Hoey
didntdoesntlike you. Plus hes ashamed.
I bet.
Anyway, hes not the sort to come creeping in here, hat
in hand, to ask forgiveness. Which you already knew.
On Saturday, I got hold of a newspaper. It had a story
clipped from the front page. I asked the nurse on assignment to
my room why. She said a staff doctor with a cousin in the
Ninth Air Force, headquartered in England, had clipped it for
a scrapbook he planned to give his cousin on his return from
overseas. Nobody else had a paper to loan eitherthe hospital
tried to keep its premises litter free and to recycle paper
products immediately. I believed the hussy. She lied like a
front-office flack, and in those days I didnt know enough to see
through the prevaricators the way I do now.
Two days later, about five in the afternoon, another nurse
came by and looked in. Nigger boy out here says he wants to
see you. You want to see him?
Euclid, I thought. Yessum. Let me see him.
Euclid came in, eyes cast down, head respectfully hang-dog.
He looked dirtier than usual, sweatieras ragamuffinish
in his clothes as anybody could look and still get in the door.
The nurseI could tellfigured shed just done her unpaid
good deed of the day.
Whats going on, Euclid?
Hey, Danbo. Braugh yoo ledder.
Where? I saw no letter. Euclid had his hands clasped in
front of him like a recaptured escapee wearing cuffs.
Heah. Euclid pulled a manilla packet from under his
stained muslin shirt and nearly poked me in the eye with it. I
took it from him. He glanced awayat the ceiling, into a
corner, at the foot of my bed.
Whos it from? I studied the handwriting on the front
of the packet: Daniel Boles. And just that quick, I knew whod
written the letter. Henry, I said.
Yessa. Mister Jumbo say gib it yoo. So Is done it. Now
I gots to go. Bye.
Euclid hustled out of the room. I opened the packet and
spread out the pages inside it in my lap.
I write to you with considerable difficulty,
Daniel, for I must labour both to express myself in an apposite idiom
and to justify actions which might otherwise seem grotesque, if not monstrous.
What I have done, however, I own as products, albeit misshapen and
disfigured ones, of my finer sentimentskindness, regard, loverather than
of mere destructive egotism. In allowing outrage to deform my nobler
affections in one case, I grievously erred. But in the other I sought only to reaffirm
justice and the existing social order, not to instigate ruin and spiritual
desolation.
In the wake of your departure via ambulance to the county hospital,
Daniel, I repaired on foot to McKissic House and took a shower. From
Musselwhite I learned that your injuries would debar you from accompanying
me to Philadelphia; would, indeed, prevent you from playing baseball at
any professional level again. This news induced in me a bleak lethargythe
blues, Darius would baptise my psychological complaintand likewise a
vehement choler akin to the fury I had so often known as Victor
Frankensteins foresworn handiwork.
For two hours, my lassitude held my wrath in check; then, thinking on
your love of our sport and your cruel abstraction from it, I recalled that just
as Michelangelo had said, It is only well with me when I have a chisel in my
hand, you had once averred that you felt most alive when wearing a fielders
glove or gripping a bat.
This recollection goaded me from bed. I believe I may have howled. I
forsook the still, hot rooms of McKissic House. I quitted the equivocal revelry
of my teammates (men somewhat more enkindled by our victory than abashed
by your ill fortune) and directed myself through the twilight to Cotton Creek
Street and the clapboard dwelling of Linda Jane Hoey and her four children.
It had occurred to me that Ligonier Hoey, unlike other Gendarmes, had a
local home to which to retire. There his wife and helpmeet would welcome
him, commiserate over his season-ending loss, and absolve him with laughter
and kisses of any complicity in your becripplement. This conjectural domestic
scene, so tender and so unjust, heaped faggots on my rage.
As I strode, dogs of all typesspaniels, blueticks, rodent-faced
mongrelsleft their porches to defend their shabby fiefdoms and harry my
passage. Heedless, I strode on, preparing myself for a head-to-head affray
with the miscreant I had once counted teammate and friend. When a hound
of umber eye summoned the brass to bite my heel, I twisted it up from the
walk by its hackles, and flung it simpering into a pack of like-minded dogs
trailing me along a holly row. The cur landed amidst its kindred, scattering
them in girning panic. At length it scrambled lamely away into the shrubbery.
I continued, impervious to the cruelty of my act and the mayhemic
dimensions of my humour.
In the spacious confines of Alligator Park, I slowed my step, intuitively
detecting a hint of what could lie in wait not only for my prey but also for
me. I spoke one word aloud: Atonement. The silhouetted planks of some
teeter-totters, primitive machines for the fabrication of joy, calmed me with
their offset diagonals. I must bank the coals of my anger, I reasoned, and
confront Hoey as one sane and well-intentioned being to another. When I
knocked on his door, his youngest son-your fortuitous namesake,
Danielopened it and gazed up at me as if from a trench.
Jumbos here! he shouted. The biggest man in the world! The mostest
homers in a season!
Linda Jane Hoey appeared behind young Daniel, wearing a look of
commingled charity and exasperation, as if a black-sheep uncle had intruded
on a private celebration. I was not beloved of Mrs Hoey; my size and mien
discomfited her. At every home game, she had held herself and her children
frostily aloof, fearing perhaps that, if vexed, I would treat of her offspring as
I had just treated of that vile dog. Before I could ask for her spouse,
exasperation decided Mrs Hoeys rejoinder to my unsolicited appearance.
Bucks family needs him tonight, Mr Clerval, and he needs us. What
do you want?
Only a word or two. Let me see your husband and I will quit your
neighbourhood as soon as we settle between us a certain important matter.
What matter?
Whereupon, quite like an immaterial phantom, Ligonier Hoey disclosed himself
and pulled both Linda Jane and young Daniel from the door. Barefooted, he
stood before me, his chin outthrusthow must I put
this?gladitorially.
Do for you, Clerval? Pretty late to drop by on a social call. Im not
much in the mood.
I scarcely wonder, I said. In trying to thwart our final double
play, you acted with undue aggression. I fear you meant fo inflict injury.
Didnt! young Daniel said loudly. Didnt either!
Hoey commanded his wife to withdraw along with young Daniel.
When she had obeyed, be said, Screw you, Jumbo. My mottos play full out
and dont cry in your beer if you draw to a busted flush.
To date, playing full out hasnt resulted in your utter incapacitation,
I observed.
Look, what do you want? Crocodile tears? A written apology?
Buck, your dinners getting cold! Mrs Hoey called. Cant you
discuss your problem later? The brunt of this plaintive inquiry was meant, I
felt, for me.
I have no later here in Highbridge, I told him. On Tuesday
I leave for Philadelphia.
Congratulations, Hoey said churlishly. Rub it in.
What I want includes not only an acknowledgement to your hapless
victim
Hey, Dumbo was hopelessI mean, haplesslong before I
got to him.
of your crime against him, but, yes, a written apology for the
Herald, and monetary reparations for his blasted career.
Buck! Buck, come onnn!
The miscreant shouted over his shoulder: For Gods sake, woman, let
us talk! Were going for a walk to hash it out! He stepped onto the porch
with me and pulled the door to with an emphatic bang. I could not determine
if be harboured more asperity for me or for his wife.
We walked side by side into Alligator Park. The dogs that had beset me
earlier shunned us now, barking only tentatively. Hoey and I ended in the
playground where the shadows of teeter-totters still laid an incongruous calm
upon me. For an instant I believed that Hoey and I would discover not only
an accord about his guilt but also a cure, Daniel, for your disability. We
stood beside a metal sliderecreational equipment that had escaped
scrapmetal requisitioningweighing our provisional arguments,
In any championship game, a real competitor goes for broke, Hoey
said. He brawls for every advantage. I wont apologise for that, Jumbo.
Youve got no right to ask me to.
Limits exist, I said. Today, however, to salve your lacerated pride,
you robbed Daniel Boles of any chance of realising the most important goal of
his life.
Jesus, I didnt notice you dogging it. You powdered one off Sundog
Billy. You stretched like fucking Plastic Man to take Dumbos last throw.
In neither case did I cripple a rival. Or strive to inflict any wound
more distressing than defeat.
Horseshit.
I beg your pardon.
I said, Horseshit.
Your dogged refusal to admit culpability pisses me off. Continue thus
and I may well have cause to thrash you an inch shy of extinction.
Youd like to beat the shit out of me?
Youve proved yourself conscienceless.
Listen at you. Hank Clerval, the pacifist, wants to whip my brains
into a meringue.
I do. I do indeed.
Hoey regaled me with a contemptuous fleer. Well, try it, you highfalutin
tower of Jell-O. You hypocrite. Youre no better than me, Jumbonot
deep down anyways, where the stinking rats of envy screw.
I ache for Daniel, for all the acne-ridden soldiers. I despair of their
futures.
Worry about your own. Them guys in the bigsll eat a lummox like
you alive. And youre so ugly, even success up there wont guarantee you any
nookie. Zat why youre upset I put my spikes in Dumbos jewels?
Fraid youre gonna have to get you a new little gal-boy?
Have a care.
Or is it the other way round? Youre a real pirates chest of secrets.
The crap we dont know about you, why, itd fill an encyclopedia.
Hoey anticipated neither the fury of my outrage nor my lunge. My left
hand encircled his neck, compressed his topmost vertebrae towards his Adams
apple, and dragged him over to a pair of shaggy sycamores on afar margin of
the playground. Hoey fought, but I had effected a one-handed cloture of his
windpipe, which muffled his protests and vitiated his exertions. A leopard
caching a springbokso imagine me as I clambered into the larger of the
sycamores and wedged Hoey between two of its branches. My conscience had
left me, nor did it soon return.
You sonuva b-b-bitch. Hoeys hiccoughing speech prompted first a
remembrance of your stammer, Daniel, and then a brilliant inner movie of
Hoeys hateful slide. So much the better for the indemnification I meant to
extract, so much the more agonising for your petty tormentor.
Bracing Hoey in place, I removed his belt and secured his bands behind
him. Because he strove to curse and bite me. I wedged his own soiled
handkerchief into his mouth. We swayed together, sixteen feet above the
indurate swell of earth from which the tree columned and spread. I hooked one
leg about a stout upper branch, seized Hoey by the shoulders, and hurled him
downwards with the same authority and force that Jehovah God launched
Lucifer and his minions from Heaven.
The bones in Hoeys legs splintered with a firelike crackling. He
writhed on the ground like a broken-backed squirrel. With a great eructation
of wind and blood, Hoey expelled the gag I had fashioned for him and began
both to curse me and to cry for help.
Not to have killed him pleased me. I brachiated from one bough to a
lower one, released it, and struck the ground astraddle the man who had
hectored you all season, the jerk who, just that afternoon, had gratuitously
ended your career. You s-sonuva, he continued to curse. You
s-s-sonuva . . . His lips were foam-flecked; his eyes, like glowing dimes.
My fury had not yet expended itself, nor, listening to Hoeys unrepentant
curses, did I feel that I had yet satisfactorily avenged you. I took Hoeys
tongue between two fingers and wrenched it bleeding from his mouth. His
eyeballs started from his head, his back arched, and an uncouth groan broke
from his larynx. I retrieved the handkerchief that he had spit from his mouth
and pushed it back into that unlovely cavityto stanch the flows of blood
and wordless bawling vituperation.
Your nemesiss tongue in hand, I stood up and gloated over his devastation.
Fuck you, I told his writhing form. Fuck you sempitemally.
The jaundiced sclera of Hoeys eyes circumvolved back so that the veins in
them seemed a macabre reflection of the veins in the dead-calm leaves of our
sycamore canopy. A pang of doubt spasmed in me, and I withdrew from that
place, abandoning him, as in my first life I had fled the scenes of crimes now
freshly brilliant in memory.
Leaving Alligator Park, Daniel, I saw the hound that, earlier, I had pitched
into its pack fellows. Recognising me, it nevertheless paced me along the walk.
Its hackles bristled. Its eyes flashed like the beacon of a lighthouse in the
Orkneys. Even in my agitation, I admired the animal for its doggedness. As a
memento of my regard, I tossed it the tongue in my hand, and it fell to.
Behind McKissic House, I found that in my absence, albeit within the past ten
or fifteen minutes, chaos had erupted. Mister JayMacs boarders clustered
vigilantly on the grassy skirt of Hellbender Pond as Reese Curriden and Lon
Musselwhite paddled a wooden johnboat towards what appeared to be a floating
hearth log ablaze in the middle distance.
Dont go too close! somebody cried.
What in hellre they planning to do? someone else said. Slap water
at her with their paddles?
What is it? What happened? I whispered.
Its Miss Giselle in your leather canoe, Dunnagin said. She took it
out for a little jaunt, thenWHOOSH!it burst into flames.
She drenched it with gasoline, Trapdoor Evans said. Rationed
gasoline.
I shed my boots and ran into the blood-warm water. The flames from my
kayakindeed, from Giselle McKissics shriveling upper bodyleapt
skywards like a wind-riven wall of marigolds, salvia, azaleas, and red clover.
I swam towards that wall. Like the albumen of a thousand bloody egg yolks
beaten to a swirl, the reflection of the flames jittered through the water.
Daniel, I swam thoughtlessly, insensible to anything that was not my burning
kayak, empty of any notion of what I must do when I reached the vessel. At
lengthquite rapidly, in factI overtook the johnboat oared by Muscles and
Curriden.
Curriden shouted, Henry, dont go out there!
I continued my obsessive Australian crawl. Curriden thrust a paddle
into my flank, hoping thereby to dissuade me from my purpose (whatever it
might be). When he nudged me again, gouging me in the ribs, I grabbed and
twisted the oar blade, drawing him with a prodigious splash into the water.
He flailed and gasped, but finally dragged himself back into the johnboat
without capsizing it, while I swam on my own headlong way.
Soon I dropped my legs and dog-paddled, for the heat streaming from
the self-immolated Giselles funeral barge struck me fully; it threatened to
scald even those parts of me ostensibly safe under water.
Giselle! I cried for all but the newborn corpse herself to hear.
Muscles and Curridenand my teammates ashoreshouted through
the tumult for me to turn aside. Despite the heat and my growing exhaustion,
I swam nearer the kayak, trod in place the tepid water, and slapped gout after
gout at the horrific sight before me. Giselle piloted my canoe like a dead bride
imperfectly cremated, then toppled forward like a released marionette, and, as
the flames consumed the last of their fuel, submersed with the kayak. Down
she went, resting on a seat of already-burnt woven grass, towards the silt and
muck of the ponds stygian floor.
Daniel, I took a great breath, and dove. The vacuum established by the
flooded hull of the kayak, as it plunged slowly into darkness, imparted itself to
my body through the water. I was tugged after, like a fly in the paltry
maelstrom of a shower drain. To what dread terminus would that watery
engine deliver me?
Blessedly, I had filled my lungs before going under, and my capacity in
this regard eclipses that of human beings conventionally propagated. The night
above and the murkiness of the medium through which I swam conspired to
blind me; and yet I saw not only filamentous pondwrack and slime-fouled
cypress roots, but also the charcoaled body of my erstwhile paramour and the
whalebone frame of my kayak. Indeed, descending, I saw the blackened
monkey face and the brittle limbs of Giselle McKissic woven into the ponds
liquid papyrus. Or believe I saw them.
How to extricate the woman from the sinking kayak? I could think of
no way. Therefore, I spoke an abashed farewell and faced away from her
watery grave to find the world again. The instant I did so the tenebrous
vision I had had of that scene, a tableau mayhap illuminated by pond
phosphor, ichthyoidal incandescence, and my own remorseful longings, flashed
into blackness.
Why not commit myself forever, I wondered, to that extinguishing
medium and die with Giselle? She had taken her life to punish herself for
crediting even a transitory happiness, but also to punish Mister JayMac for
denying her a permanent one, and me for yielding to her blandishments only
to forswear my desperate surrender when conscience unpunctually reasserted
itself. (Indeed, in yielding to her appeals, I may have sought to cuckold,
belatedly, my creator, for in each union with Giselle I always saw the visage
of Elizabeth Lavenza, my creators bride, whom I cruelly murdered.) I did
not deserve to die with Giselle. She was not my wife, and I had loved her,
whether carnally or reverentially, for too brief a time to sleep beside her
forever in her aqueous mausoleum.
I surfaced and swam back to shore. Muscles and Curriden had
preceded me. No one had any notion where Mister JayMac had gone or what
we should do. Evans averred that Mister JayMac, to celebrate our pennant
and also to benumb himself to the burden of Hoeys crippling assault on you,
Daniel, had repaired to the arms of a fancy woman in the Oglethorpe Hotel.
Several acceded to the probability of this last speculation.
Muscles said, To hell with that. Heggie, call the cops, fire department
too. To help bring the body up.
Tomorrow, Lamar Knowles said. Its too blamed dark to grapple
for a corpse.
Yeah, well, if Mister JayMac was here, Muscles said, hed set up
floodlights and have her out in a hour, tops.
He isnt here, Lamar Knowles said.
Euclid came down from the boardinghouse. He wriggled through the men on the
edge of the pond and halted before me, daunted, I think, by my fell
and water-lagged aspect.
Miz Hoey say you wen ouw wi Mr Hoey. Say Mr Hoey ain come
back. Say, do you know wha hopn toom?
No. I dont. I pushed through the crowd, all too aware that soon
Linda Jane Hoey and the local gendarmerie would discover the injured Hoey
and deduce correctly that I had broken his legs and torn his tongue from his
mouth. It seemed, Daniel, that the span of my ill-fated liberty among your
own kind was ending; likewise, my hopes of finding an accomplishment and
thus a meaning in my second life through the instrumentality of baseball. A
welter of perplexities gripped me as I entered McKissic House, climbed the
stairs, and burst into our garret.
First, Daniel, through wrath and violence I had nullified all my efforts
to atone for the nefariousness of my first life. My brutal treatment of Hoey
and my wicked incognizance of the depths of Giselles melancholia had evicted
me from an unchartered society of human saints in which I had always
assumed myself a member. Second, by these acts I had wronged my benefactor,
Jordan McKissic, repaying trust with deviltry and throwing down by a type
of roundabout homicide his marriage. Third, I had recklessly annulled the
investments of both the Hellbenders and the Phillies,for my only choices now
were giving up to the civil authorities or fleeing into the night.
Looking about my portion of our room, I found that Giselle had purloined some
of my belongings: notebooks, letters, clothes, souvenirs of the Oongpekmut,
etc. Part of you I take with me read a note on my bed.
Indeed, these items she had perverselyaye, and poignantlyincluded in her
self-immolation and her submersion. All were destroyed; their char drifted
through the trash and bacteria in the pond, or lay sodden and lost in its ebony
bottom ooze. I recalled the grinding wretchedness of my worst days, whether
as Frankensteins bewildered get or as the heartsick widower of Kariak.
I wept, Daniel. Weeping, I folded into a bag those clothes that Giselle
had not taken. I advanced upon the stairs. I heard the downstairs telephone
ring. I heard someone seize the instrument and speak. Momentarily, this
personVito Mariani?cried out to the Hellbenders in the parlor, They
found Hoey in Alligator Park, but hes dead, you guys! Poor ol Buckos
dead!
I hurried down both flights of stairs and quietly let myself out. Then I
betook myself through the most sparsely populated regions of townschool
yards, alleyways, pine copsesuntil it seemed unlikely that either my
team-mates or the police would catch me and remand me to prison.
For all these reasons, Daniel, I have not visited you, nor reported to the
club in Philadelphia. In my fugitive state, several agonies continually plague
me, chief among them the murderor murdersthat I have committed.
Also of scourging primacy are the heinous crimes inflicted upon the Hoeys
and upon you, Daniel, as my comrade in hope. I might better have avenged
you, I see now, by acquitting myself well in the major leagues than by
savaging the man who debarred your own elevation there.
I am on the lam. This self-concealing style of life is not unfamiliar to
me. Many years ago, I practiced it in the waste tracts of Alaska, becoming a
creature of legend to the whites who journeyed through. Thus, the
Oongpekmut called me Inyookootuk, the Hiding Man. I am again become
Inyookootuk. In this role, my size notwithstanding, I have twice returned to
Highbridge to befriend Linda Jane Hoey and her children, as I befriended the
cottagers De Lacey in my first life. I leave canned food items on her threshold
and chopped wood for her stove or fire grates in a box out back. These pathetic
kindnesses do not redeem my crime or return the Hoeys dead provider; I
draw from them, however, a selfish consolation.
In our minds, as well as in our acts, we all struggle for self-absolution.
I do not believe in my maker, Daniel, for he did not believe in me.
The God you worship seems at an unbridgeable remove. I would ask his
forgiveness, but, as much as I wish to, I cannot regard myself as either his
child or his ward. Therefore, sireless and alone, I devise salvific mental
stratagems for myself, arcane apologia to justify and remit my sins. In the
case of Hoeys murder, I have settled upon two mitigating circumstances,
the second more compelling than the first. How, you may ask, have I slipped
the bonds of the Sixth Commandment?
I had no intent to kill Ligonier Hoey.
Retribution is a portentous duty, but a more noble one than
vengeance.
You see, Daniel, in doing what I did, I sought less to injure Hoey
(although harm was required) than to uphold you. Unhappily, the mechanism
of this advocacy converted deliberate harm to unexpected death. Never, though,
did I seek to extract it.
Does my argument appear a self-deluding sophistry? Perhaps it is. But
oh! Daniel, I know that the murders of my original incarnation were but the
fleeting aberrancies of a gentle nature twisted by otherschiefly, my hedging
makerinto an alien cruelty. Then, rejected and despised, I killed five times
for revenge. In this much longer incarnation, by many accepted and by many
others acclaimed, I have killed but once, Daniel, and then, unintentionally, for
love. Does this not prove that I have undergone an evolution worthy of your
regard? Am I not your friend?
Faithfully,
Henry
P. S. This message comes to you by my evangel Euclid, whom, on my most recent
visit to Highbridge, I found at his mothers house. When you have read it,
and digested all its implications, I beseech you to destroy it, preferably
by flame. Fear not, however. We will meet again.
Like a rescue worker scratching through
tornado wreckage, I reread Henrys letter. Although Miss
LaRainad left me some matches, and a wastebasket sat near
enough to drop the packet in and burn it without setting the
whole hospital afire, I put the letter back in its envelope and
slid it under my mattress. What lies Id been spoonfed, what
mealy-mouthed crapola.
Nurse! I yelled. NURSE!
By the luck of the shift, I got the same slick honey whod
told me a doctord scissor-clipped the Saturday Herald so his
Army Air Corps cousin could read the clip. Baloney. Bohunk
Choctaw. Anyway, she came in with her boyish perky flip-do
and her creamy butt-hugger of a uniformlooking cute, looking
put uponand eyeballed me like I was a bedrid stink
beetle.
You dont have to shout, Danny. Push yore call button.
Miss Giselle burnt herself up. Henry threw Buck Hoey
out of a tree. Hoey croaked. Henrys scrammed. The Heralds
run it all, but yallve pulled a damn ol hush-it-up on me.
Darlin, who you been talkin to?
Why in helld you try to keep it from me?
Talk that way, Ill have to fetch some FiSoHex and scrub
yore naughty mouf out.
Hells and damns you scrub. Flat-out lies you suck like
Life Savers.
That raised her dander. I do as Im told. She flounced
back to corridor headquarters.
When Phoebe came in, I waylaid her the same way. I
stormed and bellyached. She drank in my rant as much through
her eyes as her ears and squinted with tomboy skepticism.
Well?
I liked you better tongue-tied.
I liked you better on the up and up, playing straight and
letting the chips
You mean the ch-ch-chips. She ratcheted like a slipped
bicycle chain. Look, relax. Uncle JayMac, grief-struck like he
was, and still is, didnt want to dump any more on you than
youd awready got. Is that a crime?
But yall lied!
Who squealed, Ichabod? Who told you?
Well, I knew enough to shut up. Standing on the foredeck
loudly denouncing liars, I knew enough to lie. I ast this
guy limping past my door with Saturdays paper if I could see
it. He let me s-s-see it.
During September, I had two follow-up operations, physical therapy with support bars and crutches (reminding me of Henrys reconditioning efforts in Missouri, after his self-directed height-reduction surgery), several sessions with an imported Camp Penticuff nutpick, and more time to brood and dismalize than a stalled front-line regiment with trench foot. I filled in the time by writing Mama Laurel letters and reading a long downbeat novel about a young British doctor with a clubfoot.
When I could hobble about on crutches,
Dr Nesheim released me. I spent my last two days in Highbridge
in my old attic room at McKissic House. Everything
Henryd brought to furnish or decorate it was gone: the bed
with its plywood bracing, the homemade bookcase, the woven-grass
divider, the matted photo of a William Blake drawing,
everything. Mister JayMacd wanted to stick me in a downstairs
room until my departure for Tenkiller, to spare me the pain of
climbing and descending, but I wanted no other room, even when I saw how
changedhow naked, emptied out, and bigits
stripping had left it. I said my struggles up and down the
stairs would be therapeutic.
Clerval snuck in to get the smaller items, we think,
Mister JayMac told me on Monday. They were gone when
Curriden and I dismantled the bed and the book shelves.
(Once gone, I noticed, Hellbenders ceased to qualify as misters.)
Henry stole his own stuff?
Thats a contradiction in terms, Mr Boles. However, as
a fugitive from justice and a lodger in arrears, he trespassed to
retrieve ita trick he mayve learned from Darius.
He didnt mean to kill Hoey, I said. I mean, killing
just wasnt Henrys way.
Well, I wouldntve blamed him if he had. What I find
hardest to take is him forsaking the near-accomplished dreamthe
stupidity that compelled it.
He loved me, I said.
A muscle beside Mister JayMacs eye twitched. Neither
Clerval nor anyone else has touched your notebooks. Your gear
is all jes as you left it. Cept Kizzy washed and flat-ironed your
Hellbender blouse and a whole pancake stack of skivvies.
How did Mister JayMac even know about my notebooksthere
in my knife-gouged school desk, with its inked-in
scratches and doodlesif they hadnt been touched?
And, I understood, my notebooks now probably contained
the only copy of From Remorse to Self-Respect: My
Second Life in existence anywhere. Henrys original had gone
to carbon during Miss Giselles suicide. I ran my fingers over
the desks oaken lid, but didnt try to peek inside its book
compartment.
Mister JayMac went to the window by the fire stairs. He
gazed out over the victory garden and down the hand-mowed
slope past his gazebo to Hellbender Pond. Itd been a rain-starved
September; the cornd turned to brown-paper spindles, and the grass
had yellowish heat circles of different sizesaccursed
fairy ringssinged into it in overlaps and stand-alone
compass loops.
Why do you suppose Giselle did that, Danny? He had
his back to me. Had I hurt her that bad?
Well, I could only stare.
Cat got your tongue again, Mr Boles?
Nosir. Its a hard question.
She really did care for me. I wouldnt see it.
She probably cared a lot, I said. Caring too much can
chase you furious.
Mister JayMac turned around. As if you knew jackshit
about it. His gaze drifted to the faded place where Henrys
only matted picture had hung.
Jackshit, jillshitI thought you hated potty talk, sir.
Ill have Euclid bring you up a fan, this hotbox could use
one. He left, shutting me up in that hotbox alone. I could
hear him clippity-clopping to the landing below.
Twenty or so minutes later, Euclid came up with a fan
about five years older than Henrys old model.
Whered Henry go after he gave you that letter, Euclid?
Howd he look? Have you told anybody else you saw him?
Nobody buh you.
Okay, okay. Answer my other questions.
Euclid was sneaking into puberty. His jaw had widened,
his chest had a new fullness. In his threadbare linen shirt,
glossy hardware-store britches, and floppy-soled shoes, he set
the fan on the floor and plugged it in.
Come like a robber when Detta Rae honky-tonkin, he
said. Tol me gib you the ledder. Took off same way he come.
Look big n scairy, thass how he look.
Whered he come from? Whered he go?
How you spec me to know? Come from hell, Danbo.
Went the same place Darius done gone.
The same place Darius . . . ? But Euclid just
switched on the fan, which bumped around the floor like a
wind-up frog, and left. Henrys midnight visit had scared the
Georgia bejabbers out of him.
I crutched over to my bed and sat down. I had a ticket
back to Oklahoma in my pocket. Id leave on Friday, first day
of October. What would I do in Tenkiller when I got there,
though? It crossed my mind my most profitable option might
be standing in front of the Cherokee Feed Store cadging dimes
from home folks who mistook me for a wounded soldier. . . .
One night later, rain. It wet the grass,
the victory garden, the crazy whirr of the crickets. Earlier in the
evening, Id moved my fan to the window, and a fresh breeze a
little after midnight made me reach down and rumble for a
sheeta first for me that summer (unless, of course, the
sheetd already been soaked in cold water). Then the fan spun
moisture into the room, spitting icy droplets at my face and
pillow.
The raind sharpened and picked up. It rattled the tin on
the attic gables and cascaded down the fire stairs like some sort
of stepping-stone waterfall. The gutters under the eaves clattered
and gushed.
I sat up. A pitchfork of lightning jabbed down on the
houses Alabama side. Through the window I could see, just
for a sec, the thrashing corn in the victory garden, the thrashing
magnolias and sycamores near the pond, and the skeleton
of the gazebo. Then, noisy blackness. Then another many-fingered
electric clawright behind a coal-chute judder of
thundergrabbed for the corn, the trees, the gazebo, the
pond. I saw a figure in a canoe on the rain-whipped water, Miss
Giselles ghost, or maybe just a floating pecan bough torn off
its trunk by the storm.
My fan stopped prowling on the windowsill, its propellers
creaked to a stall. The stormd knocked our power out. To
make sure, I reached up, shivering, and groped for the switch
on the pole lamp beside my bed.
Thwick!
The dark dragged itself out like an endless roll of funeral
bunting. McKissic House, probably half of Highbridge, was
kilowattless. Yow. In town, you could usually get light with a
finger flip, but nowtorrents washing the factory districts
cobblestones, the peanut fields outside town, and the barracks
at Camp Penticuffnothing but clattering blackness. I
huddled on my bed, scairt numb.
Thunder grumbled, more lightning cracked: God Himself
homering to the seats over the universes edge. The crowdwhich
existed the way the dead existroared. The rain and
the noise shook me; twinges beset my rebuilt knee, my jammed
hip, the scars on my thigh. I prayed to Almighty God, and to
my not quite so omnipotent mother.
A shape hovered into view on the topmost landing of the
fire stairs; it filled the square of my window and bent there in
silhouette like a shadow on a black-plastic movie screen. A
horror movie. When the figure poked its head in the window
and accidentally knocked my fan to the floor, I recognized it as
Henry. A whole series of branching lightning strokeslike
phosphorescent tuber roots, or a sky-size X-ray of nerve cellslit
up his crooked face from the sides. He grinned in his
glum, turned-funny way.
Henrys greasy hair lay plastered to his skull like Johnny
Weissmullers after a fierce swim through a jungle lagoon. His
eyes blinked yellow. His skin shone yellow. His teeth had the
nicotine gleam of tobacco-stained store-boughts.
Maybe, I thought, our palship and his long letter aside,
hed come back to kill memy reward for beating out Buck
Hoey at short, getting Hoey traded, and setting up the conditions
thatd prodded Henry into throwing Hoey out of a tree
and then yanking his tongue out. Id snarled the long comeback
Henryd engineered after his nightmare march through
Europe, over a century and a half ago.
DanielwhisperingDaniel, may I come in?
Sure. Whereve you been? Whatre you doing?
Henrys Sunday-go-to-meeting shirt and his muddy coveralls
were sodden, but he climbed over the sill anyway and
stepped on the fan hed already knocked to the floor. In the
middle of the room, he held his arms out and let the water
drenching his sleeves drip in shimmery membranes to the floor.
Didnt I promise you we would meet again? The emptiness
of our roomor his half of the roomquieted him, even
though hed helped to empty it.
Henry, whaddaya want? Theyll catch you here, youll
end up in the pokey.
No jail in Highbridge can hold me.
Whyd you have to kill Hoey? It was bad enough, what
Hoey did to me.
My letter . . . I didnt mean to kill him, but to avenge
you. In the end, I left him speechless.
A funny word for dead, Henry.
Come away with menot for long. A few days only. To
see where Ive sequestered myself.
Im going home. Ive got a ticket.
Some possess tickets for that destination. Some do not.
These words lit up the inside of my skull. Henryd left
Hoey speechless out of regard for me, a pissed-off sense of
abraded justice. Hed been my roommate. I could barely see
him, a rain-soaked thing in the dark, but I used my crutches to
stump over to him to give him a hug. My hands around his
back got no closer than the rock-hard dimples on either side of
his spine. He was too lean for love handles and too knurled for
comfort, but I clove to him anyway, my crutches tumbled to
the floor.
The bulb in my pole lamp pinged on, stinging our eyes.
The fan Henryd knocked to the floor began bumbling around.
Henry looked twice as big in the light, and the fan sounded ten
times as loud. Henry, still hugging me, pulled the fans plug
and switched off the lamp.
Come, Daniel. Escape with me.
I dont need to. This aint my prison, and I havent done
anything to run from the police for.
My reasoning didnt impress Henry. Even in the dark, he
found my duffel and slapped it into my hands. Pack. He
helped me, piling clothes from my cardboard chifforobe onto
the bed. Neatly. It made me realize he had owl eyes, two built-in
nightscopes. I began to pack. Dont forget your notebooks.
They belong at the bottom, shielded and snug. So I dug them
out of the school desk beside my bed. Henry took them and
put them at the bottom of my bag with one easy plunge of his
arm. I piled my clothes in on top, and my ball gear in on top
of my duds, and faced Henry with my duffel slung GI- or
maybe Santa-style over my shoulder, a crutch in one arm pit.
Out the window, Daniel. Into the rain and the bemusing
tangles of the night.
I couldnt reply to such poppycock. I did a one-footed
crutch-supported hop to the window. To my amazement, Euclid
stood drenched on the fire-exit landing, waiting to take my
bag and tote it down the slick wet stairs.
Euclid!
Shoo, he said. Shoo-shoo. Keep yo mouf cloh n gid
on ouw. Me, I gots to come on back fo dawk.
We tip-toedor, in my case, crutch-stumpeddown the
fire stairs in straggly single file, hurrying like the stoop-backed
targets of a stoning. Down, we piled into a blue Studebaker
Euclid said belonged to his mama, Detta Rae Satterfield. It had
a C gas-rationing sticker on the windshield (like Colonel
Elshtains Hudson Terraplane), but I couldnt figure why, and
didnt have the sand to ask. Henry scrambled into the back seat
with my duffel. I arranged myself up front, on the wide divan-like
seat with Euclid. Hed propped himself on a cushion as
near the steering wheel as he could get.
Believe me, a fourteen-year-old chauffeur did nothing to
boost my confidence in Henrys getaway plan.
Euclid backed us around McKissic Housenot past the
buggy house, but the other waythen drove straight through
downtown Highbridge to the steel and concrete span thatd
given the town its name. To my surprise, Euclid did all right,
weaving only a bit. He let Henry tell him where to turn and
how fast to go, and we never made more than thirty miles per
hour on our entire seventy-some-odd-mile trip into eastern
Alabama.
Because of the downpour and wartime speed limits, our
destinationnot home, but Henrys hideaway and shrinelay
almost three hours away. Itd take Euclid that long again to return the
Studebaker to his mamas. If the highway patrolan irritable crew,
what with all the restrictions on drivingstopped him for a license
check, hed probably catch a hiding mean enough to turn his skinny brown
butt eggplant-purple.
There! Henry barked after our spooky, kidney-jouncing
ride. Halt there, Euclid!
Euclid halted. All I could see in the 3:30 A.M. drizzle
was wet pasturage, some forlorn pines, and a rugged grid of reddish
gulleys between the road and one weedy field.
Nigh. Euclid dropped us off at this unpromising-looking
bump in the blacktop. Yall behay, heah?
Henry led me into the roadside brush:
the blackberry vines, the pokeweed, the mimosa seedlings, the
no-name stickery shrubs that snagged your cuffs and sent
macelike burrs to hitchhike your socks. The raind slackened,
thank God, but our shoes sankoften with sucking PLOOPsboth
in the jumbled vegetable mulch and Alabamas oozy
pasta-sauce clay. I began to think Id gone off my nut to ride to
this muddy natural chessboard of weedy rubbish and cut-bank
arroyos, especially with a set of crutches. I had a train ticket
back to Oklahomaso whyd I let Henry pied-piper me to the
redneck boonies?
Where we goin, Henry? Henry!
He just forged ahead, a driven upright bundle of backwoods
energylike a bear, or a Sasquatch, or a mad semi-human
spawn of the land. The rain, more drizzle now than
gullywasher, held all nasty winged insects out of the air, but the
fight to keep up without sinking kept me from relishing their
absence.
HENRY!
He looked back. A dry side-channel of Tholocco Creekour
destination. Were nearly there.
The dry side-channel, when we reached it, had water in
itnot a full becks worth, but enough to put a cold squelch
under your toes.
Anyway, squelching along in this tall gully, Henry led me
to his hideaway: an earthen house tunneled into the bank of a
drought-emptied creek. This shelter mayve begun as a small
cave, but, if so, Henryd dug it out deeper and wider over the
past two years, honeycombing the red earth with chambers.
Hed also covered the creekbed doors with wild azalea, Allegheny
hawthorne, and pine boughs. Nutlets from the hawthorne
floated in the runoff sluicing down the cut. We waded
into the earth houses flooded entrance, then replaced the
damp foliage thatd hidden it. A second chamber lodged higher
and drier, and in that room, with coffee-can lanterns to see by,
we spent most of the rest of the night.
Henry sat braced against one wall with his knees drawn
up to his chin. I sat shivering on my duffel, my crutches
stacked in front of me.
Why have I brought you to this dank retreat? Henry
said. I dont doubt you must wonder.
After looking aroundat the coffee tins, the mats, the
baseball equipment used for ornamentI said, You couldve
given ol Worthy Bebout some decorating tips.
I did.
Well, he must notve listened. Whyd Henry brought
me here? Despite its homey touches, it would have been a fine
place for him to crack open my skull with a rock and feast on
my brains with his fingersif hed been a meat-eater. Even in
his eighteenth-century reign of error, though, hed liked nuts
and berries better than animal flesh, and his time among the
Oongpekmut had corrupted his vegetarianism only a bit. But
for the chill on my body, the clammy damp of my clothes, I
mightve enjoyed the coziness of Henrys Tholocco Creek warren,
his coffee-can lanterns throwing shadows around, the mizzle
outside hardly even hearable.
Your father deserted you, Daniel, as mine did me. He
fled from and forgot you, as my maker fled from and sought to
forget me. Your sireas did minerenounced any part in
your making and defaulted on his obligation to educate you.
Dick Boles taught me how to play ball.
Henry shut up. Hed caught himself up in a riff of jazzy
comparisons, though, and my tribute stunned him. He shook
off the stun: No small thing. No inconsequential pedagogy.
But what were you driving at?
Recently, your father died. You may have smoldered
these past several years with unspoken anger, but you have not
yet mourned your fatheras I, early in my second life,
grudgingly mourned Victor Frankenstein.
So?
So the process must eventually occur in you too, Daniel,
or much of what hereafter befalls you, or occurs as a result of
your own enterprise, will curdle on your palate.
All right. How do you do it?
The question caught him off-guard. Do what?
Mourn.
Oh, he said. Oh. He crawled away from the wall and
nodded into a farther chamber. Follow. And he led me on a
duck-walking tour that took us to a kind of dug-out viewing
room. Here, when he set down the candle holder hed brought,
I saw a peculiar human shadowlike a straitjacketed Egyptian
kingstretched out on the chopped-down shipping crate of
an upright piano.
When Henry lifted his candle to show me the makeshift bier, I saw these
words stenciled on the crate: MENDELSSON / Ship to 486 Mims
Street / Opp, Ala. The letters danced in the
candle flicker. The figure atop the crate resembled a mummy. It
was a mummy. And it wouldve been the strangest mummy Id
ever seen, even if Id never seen one beforewhich, as any fool
could guess, I hadnt. And forget that that mummy embodied
the remains of a whacko Swiss chemist a century and a half
dead.
I leaned into my crutches and reached out to touch the
corpseit looked barely five and a half feet from soles to
crownof Henrys creator. The wrapper encasing it was a
patchwork of smooth white pieces of horsehidebeaucoups
of scraps stitched together with thousands of S-shaped seams.
Henryd made the sleeping jacket from the scrubbed, rubbed,
and flattened skins of discarded CVL baseballs. Some of these
horsehides were smudged with infield dirt, or pocked with bat
marks, or roughened like old suedebut the shroud as a
whole, under Henrys lantern, shone ivory. The lovely weirdness
of it made my nape hairs tingle.
Out of Alaska, Daniel, I trekked into Washington with
my dead creator (newly retrieved from a volcanic cave miles
from Oongpek) slung over my shoulders. I bore him much as
Aeneas bore his aged father, Anchises, out of the burning shell
of Troy. Henry closed his eyes. Sang that hero,
Come then, dear father, up onto my back.
I will bear you on my shouldersyou will be
No burden to me at all, and whatever befall us,
One and the same peril will face us both,
And there will be one and the same salvation!
Henry opened his eyes. Of course, as I came southward
through the American Northwest, a thaw set in. Limbs once as
firm as stone lost their durity, tending towards a malleable and
aromatic decay. I confined them in the skins of animalsa
dead elk the vultures had not yet begun to pick, a bison felled
by droughtand remade Frankensteins protective case each
time I moved. During my last off-season with the Hellbenders,
I made the sheath you see here. Denuding each ball and laying
out its leathern wings wanted tedious labor. The needle-hooks
I broke were virtually uncountable.
Henry gave his father an admiring look. Dont you think
he makes a handsome long pig, even though we feast on him
only through our eyes? He seemed to expect an Amen!
Sure, I said. And Henrys stitched-up daddy definitely
was a sight.
Kneel here, Daniel.
I obeyed, mostly because the ceiling pressed so low that
kneeling under it, even with my injuries, came easy. I propped
my crutch against the piano crate.
Take my father as your own. Revile him for his paternal
failings, or grieve in silence for your heretofore unwept loss. Or
do both together. Sometimes we must rage in order to reflect,
inveigh in order to vindicate.
As I knelt there, Henry blundered softly out. In a way,
taking Henrys daddy for my own and treating him to a prayer
of curses may have helped some. In another way, it didnt seem
to help at all. After a while, my braind turned into a shifting
globe of axle grease. I leaned my head against the crate and
tried to let go of the whole sad jam-up inside me.
Nothing came.
Out of politeness, or maybe pity, I stayed
with Henry for two more days. Sleeping in a bunker a couple
of dozen feet from his horsehide-jacketed daddy gave me an
even creepier feeling than rooming with Henry had. It worried
me I had a train ticket home, but Henry had only this creek-bank
hole in the ground, fancy as it was, and no real prospects
for a better life.
Whatre you gonna do? I asked him on Wednesday night.
I continue to owe Buck Hoeys widow and children a
debt.
You cant creep around Highbridge trying to do them
daily good turns. Youll get caught.
I wish to redeem the crimenay, the condign retributionthat
befell Hoey and prompted his familys current suffering.
But you never meant to kill him.
Perhaps I did. I meant to do . . . great harm.
Well, youre a big son of a gun, and trying to fix broken
glider chains, or drop off bags of groceries, or cut wood for
emHenry, it just aint gonna do.
My recidivism condemns me utterly.
That remarkthe way he sat, his head in his handsworried
me. I could see him quitting, flinging himself off a
cliff, even if the act maimed rather than croaked him. What a
cross. He was suicidal, but couldnt die.
I rummaged in my bag and found the letter hed written
me. I quoted from it: In this much longer incarnation, by
many accepted and by many others acclaimed, I have killed but
once, Daniel, and then for love. Henry didnt even look up.
Not for revenge, you said. For love. Evolution you call it
here.
Sophistries. Carrion comfort.
So whatre you gonna do?
What I must. Henry lifted his head. Continue. Begin
anew and continue.
Turn yourself in. Then maybe youll see justice done.
Justice? I came to consciousness, Daniel, in its cynical
and selfish abrogation.
Youve seen it done. We won the pennant, didnt we?
You and I got called up.
Henry stared at me like Id just proposed to end the war
by sending the Japs my mamas favorite oatmeal-cooky recipe.
Then he smiledI thinkand shook his head.
Daniel, the electric chair would merely recharge me.
Your species cursed and harassed me during my first career on
this earth. It owes me one, I think.
Henry ate hawthorne nuts from a stoneware cereal bowl.
I cracked some early wild pecans wed gathered. Outside, the
call of a shivering Alabama screech owl echoed over the empty
channel of the Tholocco. Henry pulled off his left shoe and
turned it upside down next to his cereal bowl.
I raised my eyebrows.
To ward off ills otherwise sure to follow, Henry said. I
am entitled to my superstition.
On Friday morning, I stood on the
blacktop on my crutches, my duffel at my feet and Henry
hidden in a nearby pine copse. It wouldntve done for him to
ogre around in broad daylight. I was waiting for a chance to
thumb a ride into Troy. In Troy, I planned to connect with my
train out of Highbridge and to ride it to Memphis, where
another carrier would pick me up and haul me across Arkansas
to Oklahoma.
I had a pasteboard signTROY OR BUSTaround
my neck, and a stoic look on my farm-boy face. The ban on
pleasure driving and the absence of cars made me begin to think
Id do better to set off crutching it, but finally a truckloaded
down, as my luck required, with dozens of stacked
crates of live chickenscame grinding towards me from the
southeast. The middle-aged driver pulled over and waved me
towards his passenger side. He saw my crutches and got down
to help me.
You a wounded sojer, kiddo?
His hairthe color of fresh-made doughnutsrose in a
greasy pompadour from his forehead, and his ratty pin-striped
shirt lacked its top two buttons. Hed rolled its sleeves up to
his elbows, where the twisted-over cuffs gave it a funny space-suitish
look. I didnt want to lie so I lied not to lie, if you can
follow my logic. I tapped my throat with one finger and lifted
one of my crutches.
Awright then. Climb on up.
We stuttered off, the reek of doomed chickens hanging
over that truck like a moving canopy. The driver told me his
name, who he worked for, how many kids he had, how much
he admired and respected young fellas like myself whod sacrificed
life and limb to fight the Nips and the Huns. By the time
we hit Troy, hed invented an Army unit for me, a romantic
battle or two, five or six heroic wounds, and a faithful sweet-heart
back home in . . . well, wherever I was from.
He drove me straight to the train station. He helped me
down, carried my bag inside, and, at the ticket counter, shook
my hand with a solemn, prime-the-pump rhythm. When he let
go, I found a dollar in my palm.
Nothin can repay yall for yore wounds, kiddo, but
thats, well, thats a . . . a token. Okay?
I nodded.
The trains from Troy to Memphis and from Memphis to
Oklahoma teemed with young guys in uniform. I was dressed
in civvies, and everybody aboard naturally assumedcorrectlyId
hurt myself in a frivolous schoolboy game, not in the
training camps of Georgia or on the battlefields of Europe. So
the dogfaces ignored me, and I felt lucky, privileged even, to be
ignored.
Mama Laurel, Miss Tulipa, and Colonel Elshtain met me
at the station in Tahlequah. On first catching sight of me,
Mama commenced to cry her eyes out. She grabbed me and
pulled me to her, my crutches be damned. She clung to me like
a burr, then shoved me out to arms length and gave me a sappy
smile.
At least you wont have to go off to war, she said. At
least you wont have to die.
Mama, I done already done both.
Colonel Elshtain sniffed, but Mama and Miss Tulipa
hugged me, flooding me with the stinks of woman sweat,
prairie grime, and drugstore gardenia water.
I liked it.
The CVL shut down at the end of the
1943 season. Mister JayMac hadnt wanted it to, but only three
of the leagues eight teams had turned a profit that summerthe
Hellbenders, the Gendarmes, and the Orphans. The other
five clubs had taken a bath. Mister JayMac might stillve willed
the loop to go on, but the loss of Hank Clerval and myself, along with
Dariuss vamoosement and Miss Giselles self-pyrotechnics,
had yanked the heart right out of him. When the
owners met in Highbridge after the Yankee-Card World Series,
they voted five to three to suspend the CVL until the war
ended and able-bodied prospects again came into the talent
pool. Mister JayMacs vote counted twicemaybe three timesas
much as any other owners, but you cant force five smart
men to bleed themselves bankrupt and so he had to bow to
majority rule.
Over the winter, the Phillies, the Hellbenders big-league
holding company, tried to spruce up their imagethe elite of
Philadelphias professional losers?by sponsoring a contest to
change their nickname. (What the hell was a Phillie anyway?)
Thousands of people sent in entries, and Mrs John L. Crooks,
a caretaker along with her husband of the local Odd Fellows
Grand Lodge, won. Her suggestion was Blue Jays. This was
more than thirty years before Toronto organized an American
League club with that name, and the Phillies played under it
for only a season. They also lost their young, wise-ass owner
that winter when Commissioner Landis kicked William Cox
out of baseball for betting cold cash on his own team.
Anyway, when Mister JayMac learned of the name
change, he told Miss Tulipa in a letter he thanked God for the
CVLs decision to pack it in. A blue jay isnt a ballplayer, he
wrote. Its a defecating, marauding, squawking pest in a fowls
deceitful glad rags, and I wouldnt want a player of mine to
have to bear that epithet, not to mention the tatty costume
theyre like to design for it. Phillies, though, he could live
with, even if it meant something squishy like, well, humanitarian.
When I got home, Tenkiller seemed downright boring. I
passed most of one day studying a pair of prewar Texaco road
maps and underlining namesMuskogee, Eufaula, Cherokeewith
sound-alikes back among the counties and towns of the
CVL. Trail of Tears connections. Well, I had some links to it
of my own. Mostly, that fall, I laid or limped about, taking in Life
Can Be Beautiful, Stella Dallas, and other suchlike
day-time crap on the radio.
Eventually, I tossed my crutches, but when I walked, I
hitched around like a man with a fresh load in his drawers. No
one hired me to bale hay, dehorn cattle, or set up wildcat rigs
over in Stillwell. To Mama Laurels disgust, and even my own, I
loafed. Tenkillerites knew I was loafing too; the town was too
small for anybody local to suppose I was a poor wounded GI
wrestling with the afterclaps of combat. I didnt pretend to that
condition either. Some of my Red Stix pals had entered the
services, and I respected their sacrifice too much to try to
siphon off any of their glory, potential or real.
By December, a family friend had helped me get on as a
clerk at Funderburkes Penny & Nickel Emporium, a notions
and stationery shop where I could move at my own pace and
had no heavy lifting to do. Deck Glider, Inc., ran full tilt, of
course, but every job there had someone in it and a whole
queue of applicants standing by. My salary at Funderburkes
fell ten or twelve bucks a week shy of the minimum janitorial
salary at Deck Glider, but at least I had a job and folks
stopped looking at me with pity or contempt.
I got a couple of letters from Phoebe that fall and a
homemade Christmas card at Christmas. (Shed made the card
out of construction paper and carefully scissored magazine
photosSanta Claus standing outside the Bethlehem stable
with Oveta Gulp Hobby of the WACs, Alan Ladd, Franklin
Delano Roosevelt, and the starting lineup of the 43 Yankees.)
The second of her two letters read this way:
Dear Ichabody Beautiful (alias Daniel Boles),
How are things in Oklahoma. OK, I hope. Id tell you to keep an eye out for injuns but you ARE one, sort ofan injun not a eye, but were all eyes to ourselves, arent we? (Eye = I, if you cant shred my wheat without a scorecard.) Sorry. Schools started here, and I hate it. Im blinkng away sand ten seconds after Mrs Camson opens her mouth. My Is turn to ZZZZZs.
Mama keeps on improvng. It helps the Hellbender players have almost all gone home. It also helps Daddy writes more oftenI suggested he shd. Letters seem to arrive every week now, even if some cutup in the S.O.S. or whatever has censored parts of them all with scissors.
A senior boy here named Hal Frank Kimball thinks he likes me. He has one eyebrow and hormone hickeys. My girlfriend Sunny Ruth Grimes says hes AWOLA Wolf On the Loose. When he comes paddng around, I ice up or shove in my clutch. Now dont get yr ego or yr dander up, Daniel, but I am waitng for YOU.
No jump the gun panic, please. Im NOT in a family surcumstance. No rabbit died. On the other hand, I never want to do the aweful thing we illeegly did until we do it again togetherlicensed and sanctified. That wld have to be better, wldnt it? God, I hope so. In the meantime, keep the tool cool, OK?
Uncle Jay has been in a 2 maybe a 3 month mope. You shd drop him a line. You shd drop ME a letter. I promise to catch it.Yr patient little BB, Phoebe
P.S. If you buy every word in my billydoo, yr a real smack. Read between the lines and hit the ones that count.
P.P.S. Homer says hello.
Phoebe and I married in the early summer of 1947, the
year the CVL started back up. (Her daddy, long home from
the war, gave her away.) The Blakely Turpentiners replaced the
Marble Springs Seminoles in Georgia, and the Roanoke Rebs
took over for the Cottonton Boll Weevils in Alabama.
But I jump ahead of myself.
In the spring of 44, Id hobble out of Funderburkes
every afternoon and watch the Red Stix play or practice. I
watched the players who came into town as closely as I did my
ex-high school teammates. I noticed thingssneaky foot
speed, an unhittable specialty pitch, hidden room for improvementthat
other baseball folks, not exempting Coach Brandon
and Miss Tulipa, couldnt see, and I wrote letters to
Mister JayMac recommending a half dozen playersa couple
of locals and four unscouted visitorsas guys to watch. Mister
JayMac followed up, and after the war three of my first six
picks wound up playing full- or part-time in the National
League, two with the Phillies and one with Brooklyn.
Early in May, Coach Brandon got word a
barnstorming team of Negro all-stars called the American-Afrique
Something-or-Others had an official invitation to play
an infantry team at Camp Gruber, a training post eighteen
miles southeast of Muskogee. Coach Brandon had a drill
instructor friend who could get us a pass onto the post to see the
game, if we wanted it. A memory clip of the Splendid Dominican
Touristers ran in my headold Turtlemouth Clark pitching,
Tommy Christmas chasing down long flies in center, our
own Charlie Snow falling over the fence and fatally hemorrhaging,
with Oscar Walls game-winning drive in his gloveand I
told Coach Brandon, Yep, Id go, especially since it was a
Sunday contest and I didnt have to work.
The game itself was the damndest exhibition I ever saw.
The American-Afrique Zaniesthat was their nicknamecame
out onto the field in clown costumes, all tricked out with
pompons, face paint, big shoes, and fright wigs. They warmed
up in these outfits, they even played the Army squad in them.
They pranced and tomfooled around like circus performers.
But despite their shenanigans, they still managed to rap the
Army boys something like sixteen to zip. A walkover. The only
thing making it bearable for us fans was the GIs realization
that the Freakies (as a few guys started calling them) couldve
beaten them in suits of armor. These decent dogfaces saved the
game. They acknowledged the Zanies talents without giving
up on themselves or letting the coloreds push their lead up into
the twenties or thirties.
I also got a kick out of the PFC announcing the game:
Now pitching for the Zanies, Whim-Wham? Dinkum-Do to
center? And taking over at shortstop, Gumbo Giddyup?
Three innings into the game, I figured out the Zany
playing right field and going by the name Cuffy was none other
than Darius Satterfield. His clown suit couldnt hide his muscular
lankiness. The greasy white makeup melting on his cheek
bones and the green and purple wig raying out from his head
like a crown of vat-dyed yarnwell, that crap kept me from
making a positive ID for an inning or three, but it couldnt
blind me forever to the smoothness of Cuffys play or the
whiplash grace of his hitting.
I wanted to wade down the bleacher tier and pull Darius
aside for a chat, but I never got within a hundred feet of him
till the same ended and he sat under an awning of the barracks
building provided as the Zanies locker room. While Coach
Brandon talked to his DI buddy, I limped into Dariuss line of
sight. When he saw me, his eyeballs gave me a bounce and his
hand snapped up like it meant to hold me at bay.
Danl Boles. Sweet gentle Jesus.
What happened to the Splendid Dominicans, Darius?
He studied me real good. You look kinda puny, hoss.
What happened to you?
I gave him the short version and pressed my own question.
Us Dominicans ran out of gas. Coupons. Working capital.
Also goodwill. Mister Cozy got us all back to KayCee with
him, but we had creditors galore and jes dropped apart. So Im
here today and mebbe tomorry asspreading the balloon
sleeves of his armsa damn ol American-Afrique Zany.
Mister JayMacd love to see you back in Highbridge.
Well, he aint big enough to beat me no mo, and I aint
big enough to let him try. He pulled off his wig and used it to
daub at the sweat-runneled grease on his face. Sorry bout yo
setback, Danl. Real, real sorry.
Hes your daddy. At least you got one. Miss Giselles
dead and he needs you.
I heard that, bout po Miss Giselle. But Mister JayMac
needs me like a hound needs another tic.
You gonna stay with these . . . Zanies?
Nosir. Gonna quit em and join up. A man caint play
ball in wartime. I guess his duty lies elsewhere, but the war
angles gainst you and its a sorry style ball that gits played
anyway. Take this turkey strut today.
The wrong team was wearing the clown suits.
Amen.
Still, you should go home. You should let Mister
JayMac help you get into a decent unit. You should probably
Danl, put yo cumulated wisdom in a croker sack with a
cow flop and burn it fo a night light. Nice to see you again.
Darius strolled around the corner and into the building. I
tried to follow him. An MP with a billy and a .45 pistol in an
unsnapped leather holster blocked my way: Zanies only. You a
Zany, kiddo?
I tried to wait, to meet Darius when he came back out in
his civvies with his teammates, but Coach Brandon found me,
and took me home, and I never saw Darius again. So far as I
know, he never played integrated pro ball, and I sometimes
think he died overseas after enlistingmaybe right there at
Camp Gruberunder a phony name.
Three years later I received a registered letter from Seattle, Washington. It contained round-trip airline tickets to Seattle from Tulsa, with stopovers in Denver, Salt Lake City, and Spokane. From Seattle, I had other tickets to Juneau, Alaska, from Juneau to Anchorage, and from Anchorage to Kodiak Island. The packet also contained a money order for two hundred dollars and a note:
Dear Daniel,
I have found your fathers grave on Attu Island, at the westernmost extremity of the Aleutian archipelago. Allow yourself two weeks and embark upon a pilgrimage to your sires final resting place. I enclose money and tickets to return you to Oklahoma at the conclusion of your valedictory journey. I will meet you at the airfield at Kodiak. You may recognise me by the stalk of wild celery I wear as a boutonniere.Faithfully, J. H. C.
Like Id need some sort of corny sign. Unless hed cut
himself down to a Munchkins height or had plastic surgery on
his ugly mug.
Anyway, the idea of a trip scared me. Id never flown
before, and the distance and the layovers terrified me. I broke
the news to Mama, though, and told her both whod sent the
tickets and that I planned to go. She knew Henry from a
creased team photograph as that big ugly-gawky fella m the
back, and from my letters home as a pretty decent roommate,
and from stories out of Highbridge at the end of the 43
season as an on-the-lam murder suspect.
Itd crossed my mind that Mama might take this news
and pass it on to Miss Tulipa, or Mayor Stone, or our new
county sheriff, but I couldnt fly off thousands of miles without
taking that chance and trusting Mama to trust me.
Dick Boles dont deserve a graveside visitor, Mama
Laurel said. Nor such a journey from the son he fled.
Even so, Im going, Mama.
Take the Brownie then. Take some pictures.
On my trip, I mustve smoked a cartontwo cartonsof
cigarettes in all those different airports and on the flights
themselves. I was twenty years old, almost legally an adult, but
because of all my travel, bad meals, and missed sleep, I had an
outbreak of schoolboy acne that upped my dependence on
tobacco. By the time my umpteenth flightthis one aboard a
small Electra prop planecame down through a tattered fog
and landed on Kodiaks airstrip, I had a lung-crumping cough.
Henry stood on the edge of the field near the parking lot.
No one could miss him, even though hed separated himself
from the other two parties there to greet the plane. As a sure
ID, though, he clutched a pale yellow stalk of wild celery in
one hand. It also struck me, as I wobbled towards him, his face
looked awfully ugly and fearsome that afternoonmost likely
because of the ivory labrets, carven like polar bears, hed inserted
in the cheek holes (in Highbridge, mere scar-tissue
welts) at the corners of his mouth.
Roomy, I said.
Henry glanced about him, at the overarching sky and the
nearby mountains visible through cloud or fog wisps. Yes, he
said, but on clear days it seems even moreso.
A Russian Aleut by the name of Dorofey
GolodoffHenry called him Fegoflew us in a beat-up light
aircraft to Nikolski, an Aleut village on Umnak, where my
fatherd been stationed during the war. Fego lived near Nikolski
in a barabara, or dugout sod house, that put me in mind of
Henrys underground hideaway in a branch of Tholocco Creek
in Alabama. We spent the night with Fego, a burly Asiatic-looking
man with a broad squashed nose and long jet-black
hair. I had a couple of inches of height on him, but he out-weighed
me by forty pounds or more, even though he moved
from room to room in his house with the speed and agility of
an otter. For supper, he fed us steamed clams, batter-fried
octopus, and a salad of kelp, wild onions, and Fox Islands
celery.
As we ate, Fego told us, When the tide goes out, the
table is set. Beyond repeating this comment, he said little else,
and all I recall of what he did say is that Aleut folk saying,
which explains how this hardy people could subsist in such a
forbidding place. Fego, however, also received pay from the
United States government as a surveyor and a backup mail
pilot, and the next day he flew us to Attu, the remotest island
in the chain, with a single delivery and refueling stopover at the
naval station airfield on Adak Island, not quite midway between
Umnak and Attu.
Luckily, or we wouldntve flown, the day broke and
stayed clear, with no fogs or willawaws arising from the collision
of Bering Sea waters and the warmer flow of the Kurishio
or Japan current, and an easy pewter chop moving along beneath
the high whine of Fegos prop plane.
On Attu, Henry led me inland on foot from Massacre
Bay towards the islands western mountains. Fego didnt accompany
us. Through most of this trek, it drizzled on us.
Towards late afternoon, the drizzle thickened into a light snow,
and my injuries put an extra hitch and a gnawing round of
lesser and greater pains into my limp.
We took shelter from the snow, the days chronic gauziness,
and the ache thatd settled in my legs in a Japanese hut
not demolished during the U.S. invasion four springs earlier. In
the huts litter, I found an empty sake bottle, a half-burnt
diary in Japanese characters, and two sets of weather-warped snow
skis. We ate from tins wed backpacked in.
Henry, whatre you doing in this godforsaken place? I
asked between spoonfuls of lumpy pork and beans.
Escorting you to your fathers grave.
I mean, besides that. Did you come back up here to live,
to be the Eskimo Hiding Man?
Inyookootuk.
Yeah, Inyookootuk. To be the Hiding Man forever?
I am not an Aleut. I would hide forever among the
Innuit of the mainland, but not in this storm-wracked island
chain.
Is that what you plan to do? Hide forever?
This is a temporary exile, Daniel, a mere sabbatical. I
wish to re-create myself. As Wordsworth wrote, So build we
up the Being that we are. But I despair of the authenticity of
my materials. He removed and pocketed his labrets, so as not
to be distracted by them on our hike tomorrow, and refused to
say another word that night.
The next day we reached a peak called Sarana Nose. The
snow had stopped. The drizzle had stopped. Sunlight dropped
through the whirling fog like lamplight through an aquarium
full of seaweed. We reached an embankment on the mountain,
a tierlike balcony on its flank, where several small stone cairns
and a group of flat-nailed wooden crosses jutted up out of the
muddy soil to mark burial plots. One cross boasted a round
Japanese grave marker with Oriental paint-brush characters on
it. I stood next to Henry in the chill, sweeping wind, dwarfed
by him on a big volcanic sea rock at the top or maybe the end
of the world.
Here your father lies, Henry said.
How do you know?
A party of Eleventh Air Force personnel came out here
during the Armys mopping-up exercisesas hunters, not
merely observers. They were shot or hand-grenaded by snipers.
The snipers buried them here and memorialized their sacrifice.
How do you know? I said again.
Henry read the hand-lettered inscription: Sleeping
here, five brave soldier heroes who forfeited youth and
happiness for their motherland.
A Jap wrote that? I said.
Henry said nothing.
A Jap my daddy and his pals had come out here to hunt
down and shoot?
Henry still said nothing.
How do you know its the graves of Dick Boles and his
friends? Does the inscription list names?
I fear it doesnt.
Then how do you know?
Sleeping here, five brave soldier heroes who forfeited
youth and happiness for their motherland, Henry read again.
That doesnt answer my
Shhhh, Henry said, a mittened finger to his lips, exactly
between the ugly labret holes at each mouth corner. In this
place, Daniel, before your fathers grave, and in the presence of
his enemys uncommon integrity, you should stand speechless,
humbly mute.
B-B-But I
Shhhh.
I bowed my head. Memories welled. When next I looked
up, a bald eagled caught a towering updraft. It wheeled in the
high Aleutian gauze. Its talons seemed to spiral through my
feelings like the threads of a screw. Finally, I looked at Henry,
almost blinded by the sting of the wind and the thin wax of
grief in my eyes.
Henry reached into his pack and rummaged out a brand-new
National League baseball. He flipped it to me. I caught it
with both hands, like an amateur. I stood there for a minute
turning that ivory ball in my gloves before it occurred to me to
wedge it into the natural cup of the stone cairn supposedly
marking my daddys grave. In that cup, the ball glinted like a
lighthouse beacon and focused the whole of Attu Island
around it, a pivot for the world to turn on.
I got out Mamas Brownie and took a picture.
As evening drew on, Henry and I walked back to the hut
where wed spent the night. The ache in my knee had let up
some, and my limp seemed less pronounced. I asked Henry
what hed done with his old man. He didnt answer.
Come on, Henry. You didnt leave him in Bama, did
you?
He shook his head, still striding, still thoughtful.
Then what? Whatd you do?
He lies among a host of ancient Aleut mummies, fur- and
grass-wrapped carcasses in a cave on one of the Islands of
Four Mountains southwest of Umnak. I never intend anyone
to move him again. His traveling days are over. There he will
rest until the generative vulcanism of this archipelago drowns
its islands, Daniel, or until the world expires in either fire or
ice. I am resigned.
Henry refused to fly back to Kodiak with
Fego and me aboard Fegos battered prop plane. He said hed
eventually return for a look-see to Oongpek, on Alaskas
Seward Peninsula, but in the meantime wanted solitude and a
chance to sort through his options. He gave Fego a small stack
of U. S. bills of various denominations, for flying us to Attu
and for returning me to Kodiak to pick up a commercial flight
to Anchorage. Then he hugged me and stood clear as Fego and
I taxied for takeoff, under a streaky sky, in a moderate
crosswind.
Whachu thinka that Henry fella? Fego asked me when
were up and rippling over the ashy chop of the Bering Sea.
His question startled me because he didnt talk all that
much. I said, Why do you ask?
Sumfin funny bout him. Not joos how beeg he is
sumfin else. Lak mebbe summa his feelins been cut loose. Lak
beeg as he is, you know, sum parta hims missin.
Which part?
Dunno. Soul mebbe. The spirit part,
How longve you known Henry, Fego?
Hey, I dont know him. Joos met him lass winter. I work
for him sumtimes since, thass it.
Oh.
He tol me you roomed with him. Gude. Cause I lak to
know the pipple I fly bettern I know this beeg ol Henry guy.
Oh.
So whatchu thinka him?
I think hes working hard on his soul, I said. I think
hes becoming a real person.
Danny Boles, a long-time scout for the Philadelphia Phillies
who began working for the Atlanta Braves in 1978, died on
opening day of the 1991 baseball season. He was 66. In the
early 1980s, he had his vocal cords removed to halt the advance
of a throat cancer whose recurrence in 1989 led to his death.
Always a famous raconteur. Boles learned to talk with the
aid of a microphone-like amplifier that he held to his throat.
The amplifier gave him a mechanical-sounding robot voice
that he was still able to infuse with personality. To obtain the
material assembled in his memoir Brittle Innings, I conducted
nearly forty interviews with Mr Boles. They ranged in length
from twenty minutes to nearly three hours. He also gave me
access to his longhand transcriptions of the journals of Henry
Clerval. From these sources, I distilled the remarkable text
now in your hands.
Look next year for my sports biography The Good Scout, in
which I chronicle Mr Boless career as one of the most able
major league scouts in post-war America. It will not stretch your
credulity quite so far as Brittle Innings has likely done, and
I immodestly regard it as the best book on this topic since
Mark Winegardners Prophet of the Sandlots.
GABRIEL STEWART
Columbus, Georgia
August 21, 1992
In addition to my family, I must thank
these people: Howard Morhaim, my indefatigable agent; Lou
Aronica, an editor and publisher who likes baseball as much as
I do; Jennifer Hershey, who edited the ms. with intelligence
and care; Eddie Hall, who sent me a little book about baseball
in the nineteenth century; Diane Hughes, who told me about
her hemophiliac father; Joel Gotler, who saw the film possibilities
in this material; John Kostmayer, who did a screenplay
based on an early novella-length version of this story; Mark
Winegardner, author of Prophet of the Sandlots, a masterpiece of
sports writing; and, of course, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
and the makers of Universal Pictures Frankenstein films of the
1930s.
Michael Bishop is the author of the Nebula Awardwinning novel No Enemy But Time, the Mythopoeic Fantasy Awardwinning novel Unicorn Mountain, and several other novels and short-story collections. He also writes poetry and criticism, and has edited the acclaimed anthology Light Years and Dark and three volumes of the annual Nebula Awards collections. Michael Bishop lives in Pine Mountain, Georgia, with his wife, Jeri, and their two college-aged children. He followed the Atlanta Braves even when they were losing.